
MARM LISA
I EDEN PLACE
III A FAMILY POLYGON
IV MARM LISA IS TRANSPLANTED
V HOW THE NEW PLANT GREW
VI FROM GRUBB TO BUTTERFLY
VII THE COMET AND THE FIXED STAR
VIII THE YOUNG MINISTER’S PSYCHOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS
IX MARM LISA’S QUEST
X THE TWINS JOIN THE CELESTIALS
Eden Place is a cramped, triangular “square” in a respectable yet rundown quarter of a bustling city, where the promise of green benches and blossoming flowers has long been worn away by the wear of daily life. Children claim the cracked ground for their endless squabbles, while weary men linger on shabby benches, smoking, reading, or tracing aimless patterns in the gravel. The few women who linger here do so with a quiet resilience, their lives intersecting the gossip‑laden fences that bind the close‑knit community together.
At the corner of this odd little street stands the house of Mrs. Grubb, a curious blend of domesticity and eccentricity. Inside, long benches line a room that feels less like a schoolroom and more like a private museum, its walls crowded with odd charts—a mammoth hand marked in purple, diagrams of human interiors rendered in pristine pink and white. The peculiar décor hints at hidden stories and unconventional passions, inviting listeners to explore the lives and quiet dramas that pulse beneath the ordinary façade of Eden Place.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (214K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2002-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1856–1923
Best known for the classic children's novel Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, she also helped shape early kindergarten education in the United States. Her work brought together a teacher's faith in childhood and a storyteller's gift for warm, lively characters.
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