Dab Kinzer: A Story of a Growing Boy

audiobook

Dab Kinzer: A Story of a Growing Boy

by William O. Stoddard

EN·~6 hours·33 chapters

Chapters

33 total
1

DAB KINZER - CHAPTER I. - THE KINZER FARM, THE NEW SUIT, AND THE WEDDING.

10:45
2

CHAPTER II. - DAB'S OLD CLOTHES GET A NEW BOY TO FIT.

9:23
3

CHAPTER III. - A MEMBER OF ONE OF THE OLDEST FAMILIES MEETS A YOUNG GENTLEMAN FROM THE CITY.

8:38
4

CHAPTER IV. - TWO BOYS, ONE PIG, AND AN UNFORTUNATE RAILWAY-TRAIN.

14:20
5

CHAPTER V. - NEW NEIGHBORS, AND GETTING SETTLED.

9:54
6

CHAPTER VI. - CRABS, BOYS, AND A BOAT-WRECK.

15:52
7

CHAPTER VII. - A VERY ACCIDENTAL CALL.

8:40
8

CHAPTER VIII. - A RESCUE, AND A GRAND GOOD TIME.

10:55
9

CHAPTER IX. - THERE ARE DIFFERENT KINDS OF BOYS.

12:51
10

CHAPTER X - A CRUISE IN "THE SWALLOW."

14:10

Description

On a quiet stretch of Long Island between a sleepy village and the Atlantic, the Kinzer farm has stood for generations, its fields stretching back to Hudson’s first voyage. The household bustles with four hearty sisters and a widowed mother, while Dabney, a lanky fifteen‑year‑old, feels forever outgrowing his clothes and his place. Though his family is robust, his thin frame makes him wonder whether his rapid growth is a blessing or a burden. He watches the neighboring Morris farm, noting how both he and the land seem to expand faster than they can be contained.

When a new railway cuts through part of the property, Mrs. Kinzer sells the resulting town lots, turning loss into a modest gain for the family. An upcoming wedding between her eldest daughter Miranda and the steady Hamilton Morris promises to link the two farms. Dab remains on the periphery, unsure how his own future will fit into the changing landscape of family and land. Listeners will follow his quiet observations as he navigates adolescence on a farm that feels both familiar and ever‑changing.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (361K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2003-11-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William O. Stoddard

William O. Stoddard

1835–1925

Best remembered as one of Abraham Lincoln’s White House secretaries, he also built a remarkably varied career as a journalist, inventor, and prolific writer for young readers. His life moved from newspaper offices and wartime Washington to more than a hundred books of fiction, memoir, poetry, and history.

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