
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
BOOK I
§ 1
§ 2
§ 3
§ 4
§ 5
§ 6
§ 7
BOOK II
In a modest home where the piano’s keys double as a metronome for daily struggle, Mrs. Sturgis tries to keep lesson rhythm while the pantry echoes with emptiness. Her youngest, Mildred, and older daughter Jeannette confront the blunt truth that there is no bread and the family’s purse is bare, turning a simple music class into a lesson in survival. The scene captures the quiet desperation of a working‑class mother who must balance teaching, pride, and the relentless pressure of unpaid bills.
As the narrative unfolds, the Sturgis family’s everyday battles become a broader portrait of American women striving for dignity amid economic hardship. Through modest triumphs—a pocket of change, a shared laugh over a cracked piano bench—the novel explores how love, sacrifice, and stubborn hope can soften even the harshest realities. Listeners will find a poignant, character‑driven story that honors the perseverance of ordinary people while hinting at the larger social forces shaping their lives.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (773K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Tim Lindell, SF2001, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
Release date
2021-07-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1881–1945
Known for fiction that took on big social questions, this American novelist wrote about marriage, labor, education, and birth control in ways that stirred conversation in the early 20th century. Before his novels found readers, he spent years working as a journalist and magazine editor.
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