Egholm and his God

audiobook

Egholm and his God

by Johannes Buchholtz

EN·~6 hours·23 chapters

Chapters

23 total
1

Egholm and his God

0:09
2

I

20:56
3

II

27:12
4

III

14:47
5

IV

6:43
6

V

20:16
7

VI

10:18
8

VII

5:10
9

VIII

11:24
10

IX

10:24

Description

A rain‑soaked November day frames the quiet life of the Egholm household, where young Sivert spends his afternoons perched at a window, listening to the drumming of drops and the muted whispers of his mother. The ordinary routine is shattered when the patriarch, Egholm, returns home earlier than expected, his steps heavy and his demeanor strained, as if burdened by an unseen weight. His arrival sparks a mixture of curiosity and dread in the boy, who watches the scene unfold through the glass, trying to make sense of the uneasy silence that settles over the room.

The story follows the fragile balance between duty and desperation, as the family navigates the tension between outward composure and inner turmoil. With each small gesture—a cracked hat, a trembling hand reaching for a match—the narrative builds a vivid portrait of a household on the brink, inviting listeners to feel the quiet anxiety that hangs in the cold, grey air. This intimate glimpse into a single, storm‑laden afternoon hints at deeper conflicts yet to surface, drawing you into the lives of those who cling to hope amid ordinary hardship.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (355K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2014-09-20

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Johannes Buchholtz

Johannes Buchholtz

1882–1940

A Danish novelist who balanced railway work with a serious literary life, he became known for fiction rooted in everyday people and the landscapes of western Jutland. His home in Struer also grew into a lively meeting place for writers and artists.

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