
INGA HEINE
J. BLICHER-CLAUSEN
In the remote reaches of the Baltic coast, the weather‑worn Klitholman manor stands as the heirloom of the Heine family, a lineage that migrated from Poland and carries a quiet, artistic bloodline. Young Inga, an infant orphan raised by her formidable great‑grandmother—referred to by locals as “the old lady”—grows up amid the manor’s crumbling grandeur, learning resilience and devotion from the woman who restores the estate with unyielding determination. Their bond, forged through daily cares and gentle disputes over heritage, becomes the heart of Inga’s early world, offering both comfort and a subtle clash of old‑world pride and modern ambition.
When Inga declares her intention to sit for the university entrance exam, her great‑grandmother’s skepticism gives way to secret pride, and the girl departs for the city, returning only during holidays. Through lively letters, Inga shares her studies, her fascination with philosophy, and the bewildering moments that make academic life feel like a burst of sunlight disrupting familiar shadows. The story captures a young woman’s struggle to honor family tradition while reaching for an intellectual future, set against the stark beauty of a coastal estate and the steadfast love that anchors her.
Language
fi
Duration
~5 hours (331K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Anna Siren and Tapio Riikonen
Release date
2020-09-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1865–1907
Best remembered for her poetry, this Danish writer also published novels and plays, often mixing emotion, romance, and dramatic tension. Writing under the pen name John Bentsen as well as her own name, she became a popular literary voice in the late 19th century.
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