Brite and Fair

audiobook

Brite and Fair

by Henry A. (Henry Augustus) Shute

EN·~5 hours·2 chapters

Chapters

2 total
1

Produced by Bill Haller

0:06
2

ILLUSTRATED BY WORTH BREHM

5:44:27

Description

A lively, first‑person journal transports listeners to a bustling 19th‑century rural community, where the narrator’s days are filled with church services, mischievous organ antics, and the endless battle against swarming flies. The diary’s colloquial voice, peppered with humorous misspellings and vivid anecdotes, paints a picture of a world where even the smallest chores—flushing flies from the dining room or hauling water on washing day—become grand adventures.

Through the narrator’s eyes we meet an eclectic cast: the clumsy organist who gets tossed from the loft, a new minister preaching unexpected compassion for insects, and a family that turns everyday labor into playful rivalry. The charm lies in the blend of innocent mischief and the earnest desire to help, all set against a backdrop of rainy streets and simple pleasures like fishing trips. Listeners will be drawn into this quirky slice of life, eager to hear how the narrator navigates the chaos and camaraderie of a bright, fair‑hearted world.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (330K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2008-08-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

HA

Henry A. (Henry Augustus) Shute

1856–1943

Best known for warm, funny stories of small-town New England, this lawyer-judge turned everyday boyhood memories into lively fiction. His "Plupy" tales, especially The Real Diary of a Real Boy, helped keep the mischief, language, and charm of 19th-century Exeter alive for later readers.

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