Grania, The Story of an Island; vol. 1/2

audiobook

Grania, The Story of an Island; vol. 1/2

by Emily Lawless

EN·~4 hours·18 chapters

Chapters

18 total

GRANIA

0:19

DEDICATION To M. C.

1:11

PART I SEPTEMBER - CHAPTER I

13:50

CHAPTER II

8:15

CHAPTER III

4:24

CHAPTER IV

9:06

CHAPTER V

15:26

CHAPTER VI

9:20

CHAPTER VII

21:03

PART II APRIL - CHAPTER I

22:19

Description

A mist‑laden September afternoon drapes over Galway Bay, where the sky and sea blur into a uniform grey, broken only by thin shafts of cold sunlight that flicker across the waves and the rugged coast of the Aran Islands. The landscape breathes a quiet, timeless melancholy, hinting at lives shaped by the relentless Atlantic and the stubborn pride of those who call the islands home. In this atmospheric backdrop, an old, patched fishing hooker creaks into view, its weathered sails bearing the marks of countless voyages.

Aboard the vessel sit Con O’Malley, a seasoned fisherman, and his bright‑eyed eleven‑year‑old daughter, Grania, whose curiosity mirrors the restless sea. Their routine is interrupted when a smaller boat drifts alongside, carrying a lanky teenager and a striking, wild‑looking man known locally as Shan Daly, a figure whose fierce eyes and untamed demeanor suggest both danger and intrigue. As the two crews converge, the quiet rhythm of island life begins to shift, promising new encounters and hidden currents beneath the surface.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (234K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images available at The Internet Archive)

Release date

2018-12-09

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Emily Lawless

Emily Lawless

1845–1913

An Irish writer with unusually wide interests, she brought fiction, history, poetry, and the natural world together in work that still feels fresh. Her novels are often noted for their psychological depth and for the way they engage with Irish life and landscape.

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