
audiobook
Produced by Tapio Riikonen
On the windswept shores of the Gulf of Bothnia, centuries of retreating sea have left a patchwork of shallow bays, silty inlets and newly risen islands. Small farms cling to the fertile peat soils, their thatched cottages dotted among pine‑clad cliffs and meadow‑streets that turn to frozen tracks in winter. As the narrator rides the icy winter road that links isolated hamlets, the landscape becomes a living character, its beauty mingled with the constant threat of snowdrifts and lost travellers.
The story follows ordinary people—farmers, fishermen and their families—who negotiate the harsh rhythms of agriculture, livestock and the fickle sea. Their everyday disputes, such as the bitter feud over a wayward cow, unfold against a backdrop of communal resilience and quiet generosity. Through vivid description and a gently wry voice, the novel paints a portrait of a forgotten corner of Finland where survival depends as much on neighborly aid as on the stubborn land itself.
Language
fi
Duration
~3 hours (210K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-02-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1827–1913
Born into poverty in rural Finland, this self-taught writer turned hard early experience into vivid stories of peasant life. His books became widely read in the late 1800s and helped bring ordinary Finnish voices into modern literature.
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