Domestic Manners of the Americans

audiobook

Domestic Manners of the Americans

by Frances Milton Trollope

EN·~11 hours·35 chapters

Chapters

35 total
1

Contents

0:40
2

CHAPTER I

6:27
3

CHAPTER II

16:17
4

CHAPTER III

24:51
5

CHAPTER IV

18:45
6

CHAPTER V

14:44
7

CHAPTER VI

12:49
8

CHAPTER VII

17:22
9

CHAPTER VIII

14:37
10

CHAPTER IX

19:54

Description

A young English family sets sail for the United States in the winter of 1827, and their arrival at the mighty mouth of the Mississippi opens a vivid window onto a world unlike any they have known. The narrator’s eye captures the stark, mud‑filled banks, towering bulrushes and the eerie wrecked mast that loom over the river’s entry, while the endless driftwood and occasional crocodile lend the landscape a wild, almost apocalyptic feel. Yet beyond the desolate scenery, she notes the bustling habitations of pilots, fishermen, and the modest villas that line the levee, hinting at a society carving a life from an unforgiving environment.

Through sharp, often witty observations, the book sketches the everyday customs of early American settlers—how families adapt to the swamp, the rhythms of river traffic, and the mingling of Southern plantation life with the labor of enslaved workers. The author’s fresh, inquisitive perspective offers modern listeners a compelling portrait of a young nation’s domestic realities, seen through the eyes of an outsider both astonished and charmed by its raw vitality.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (648K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2003-11-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Frances Milton Trollope

Frances Milton Trollope

1780–1863

A sharp-eyed English novelist and travel writer, she turned family hardship into an astonishingly productive literary career. Best known for Domestic Manners of the Americans, she wrote with energy, wit, and a strong interest in the social questions of her time.

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