Molly Brown's Freshman Days

audiobook

Molly Brown's Freshman Days

by Nell Speed

EN·~5 hours·25 chapters

Chapters

25 total

MOLLY BROWN’S FRESHMAN DAYS

0:11

ILLUSTRATIONS

0:19

Molly Brown’s Freshman Days - CHAPTER I. WELLINGTON.

14:22

CHAPTER II. THEIR NEIGHBOR.

13:19

CHAPTER III. THE PROFESSOR.

14:05

CHAPTER IV. A BUSY DAY.

17:17

CHAPTER V. THE KENTUCKY SPREAD.

13:05

CHAPTER VI. KNOTTY PROBLEMS.

11:52

CHAPTER VII. AN INCIDENT OF THE COFFEE CUPS.

14:05

CHAPTER VIII. CONCERNING CLUBS,—AND A TEA PARTY.

17:15

Description

Molly Brown arrives at Wellington University full of nervous excitement, her battered suitcase trailing behind her as she steps off the bustling train. The opening scene captures the chaotic flood of eager young women streaming through the station, each adorned in the college’s distinctive blue‑embroidered sweaters, while Molly—clad in a humble homespun dress—searches for a friendly face amid the crowd. Her tentative conversation with the baggage master and the sharp‑tongued senior, Judith, instantly sets up the contrast between seasoned students and the wide‑eyed newcomer.

Soon Molly meets Nance Oldham and a plump, quick‑witted roommate‑to‑be, discovering the informal hierarchy of dorm life and the comforting promise of Queen’s cottage. Through witty banter and shared anxieties about lost luggage and homesickness, the novel paints a vivid portrait of early‑twentieth‑century college camaraderie. Readers are invited to follow Molly’s first steps into academic life, feeling the mix of hope, uncertainty, and the budding friendships that make the freshman experience unforgettable.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (300K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan, eagkw and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2011-07-10

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Nell Speed

Nell Speed

1878–1913

Best remembered for lively girls' fiction, this early 20th-century American writer created the Molly Brown books and other warm, energetic stories for young readers. Her career was cut short, but her school and friendship adventures kept finding new readers for years afterward.

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