Big lake : A tragedy in two parts

audiobook

Big lake : A tragedy in two parts

by Lynn Riggs

EN·~1 hours·7 chapters

Chapters

7 total

BIG LAKE

2:07

FOREWORD

2:52

PART ONE

0:00

CHARACTERS

0:11

THE WOODS

40:35

PART TWO

0:00

THE LAKE

21:18

Description

Set in the Indian Territory of 1906, this lyrical drama unfolds amid the whispering pines and open skies of a frontier that feels both timeless and fragile. The story follows a handful of young townsfolk—Betty, Lloyd, Butch, Elly and the local sheriff—as they navigate the rites of passage that bind them to place and each other. Their voices echo the cadence of the land, blending folk idioms with a poet’s sensitivity, creating a world that feels as intimate as a family gathering around a campfire.

The first part, titled “The Woods,” begins with a moonlit scene in the forest, where the characters’ hopes and fears surface in quiet conversation and sudden bursts of laughter. A modest cabin becomes a stage for whispered secrets and the first hints of trouble, setting up a tension that lingers like mist over the water. The audience is drawn into the youthful exuberance and underlying anxieties that mark the cusp of adulthood.

Through vivid imagery and rhythmic dialogue, the play captures the ecstatic joy of being alive and the looming shadows that accompany every dream. Its poetic structure invites listeners to feel the pulse of the land and the heartbeat of its people, promising an emotionally resonant experience that lingers long after the final line.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (64K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

United States: Samuel French, 1927.

Credits

Bob Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2023-05-16

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Lynn Riggs

Lynn Riggs

1899–1954

Best remembered for writing the play that became Oklahoma!, this Cherokee playwright brought the people, language, and landscapes of the Southwest vividly to the stage. His work helped shape American theater while keeping a strong sense of place and identity.

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