
In a leafy Boston suburb affectionately nicknamed “Babyland,” a tight‑knit circle of young parents weaves together the demands of infant‑filled days with a surprisingly rich social life. Their evenings spill out of living rooms into makeshift dancing halls, sketching circles, and book groups, all while keeping a watchful eye on cribs and stroller‑lined sidewalks. The narrator, a half‑wife in this bustling community, offers a warm glimpse of the rhythms that bind the neighborhood together.
When the ever‑energetic Mrs. Minnie Mason proposes a Tolstoy Club, the group embraces the idea as a chance to dip their toes into Russian literature without abandoning their daily duties. With the help of a skilled “skimmer” who condenses the sprawling novels of Tolstoy, Turgenev, and other heavy‑handed writers, the club gathers for lively summaries, spirited discussion, and the occasional laugh at their own literary ambition. The meetings become a playful arena where lofty ideas meet the practicalities of suburban motherhood.
Through these gatherings, the story paints a portrait of ordinary lives seeking depth, showing how a community of caregivers can find intellectual adventure amid the hum of baby monitors and the cadence of neighborhood chatter.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (406K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Annie McGuire. This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Print archive.
Release date
2011-05-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1842–1922
An American writer and translator with a strong feel for New England life, she also helped bring Brazilian and broader Latin American poetry to English-language readers. Writing under her own name and sometimes as Dorothy Prescott, she moved comfortably between local color, fiction, and literary translation.
View all books
by Vinceslas-Eugène Dick

by Royall Tyler

by Philippe Aubert de Gaspé

by Abraham Cahan

by Abraham Cahan

by Pauline E. (Pauline Elizabeth) Hopkins

by Laure Conan