
CHAPTER I - Which is Not a Chapter at All
CHAPTER II - Which Repeats, for the Most Part, What Jim Campbell Said to Me and What I Said to Him
CHAPTER III - Which, Although It Is Largely Family History, Should Not Be Skipped by the Reader
CHAPTER IV - In Which Hephzy and I and the Plutonia Sail Together
CHAPTER V - In Which We View, and Even Mingle Slightly with, the Upper Classes
CHAPTER VI - In Which We Are Received at Bancroft's Hotel and I Receive a Letter
CHAPTER VII - In Which a Dream Becomes a Reality
CHAPTER VIII - In Which the Pilgrims Become Tenants
CHAPTER IX - In Which We Make the Acquaintance of Mayberry and a Portion of Burgleston Bogs
CHAPTER X - In Which I Break All Previous Resolutions and Make a New One
A self‑conscious narrator with a flair for the flamboyant finds himself stuck at the very first page of his own tale. Once a prolific crafter of swash‑buckling romances, he now turns the lens on himself—Hosea Kent Knowles of Bayport, a man the locals have dubbed “The Quahaug” for his stubborn, closed‑off nature. His voice is wry and full of gentle mock‑self‑deprecation, setting a tone that feels like a conversation over a weather‑worn dock rather than a grand adventure.
The real hurdle isn’t a stormy night or a mysterious stranger, but a simple choice of where to start. Between Hephzy’s cryptic circular, a puzzling transatlantic letter, and the absurd request of Captain Darius for a henhouse topped with a mansard roof and cupola, the narrator wrestles with both his own creative block and the eccentricities of his small‑town community. As he grapples with these quirky dilemmas, the story promises a humorous glimpse into everyday heroism and the art of beginning when every option seems oddly tangled.
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (691K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-06-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1870–1944
Best known for warm, witty stories set around Cape Cod, this prolific American writer created a world of village life, local characters, and quiet humor that kept readers coming back for decades.
View all books
by Joseph Crosby Lincoln

by Joseph Crosby Lincoln

by Joseph Crosby Lincoln

by Joseph Crosby Lincoln

by Joseph Crosby Lincoln

by Joseph Crosby Lincoln

by Joseph Crosby Lincoln

by Joseph Crosby Lincoln