Rudder Grange

audiobook

Rudder Grange

by Frank R. Stockton

EN·~6 hours·20 chapters

Chapters

20 total
1

CHAPTER I. TREATING OF A NOVEL STYLE OF DWELLING HOUSE.

24:10
2

CHAPTER II. TREATING OF A NOVEL STYLE OF BOARDER.

11:30
3

CHAPTER III. TREATING OF A NOVEL STYLE OF GIRL.

16:04
4

CHAPTER IV. TREATING OF A NOVEL STYLE OF BURGLAR.

15:40
5

CHAPTER V. POMONA PRODUCES A PARTIAL REVOLUTION IN RUDDER GRANGE.

12:50
6

CHAPTER VI. THE NEW RUDDER GRANGE.

20:01
7

CHAPTER VII. TREATING OF AN UNSUCCESSFUL BROKER AND A DOG.

15:44
8

CHAPTER VIII. POMONA ONCE MORE.

14:50
9

CHAPTER IX. WE CAMP OUT.

22:01
10

CHAPTER X. WET BLANKETS.

15:12

Description

A newlywed couple sets out to turn the abstract idea of “home” into a concrete address, but the search quickly becomes a comic study of the rental market’s absurdities. The narrator, armed with a practical guide he and his wife once wrote, navigates advertisements, agents, and landlords, only to discover that every seemingly perfect listing hides hidden costs or unrealistic expectations. Their quest for a modest country house—close enough to the city, shaded, mosquito‑free, and fully furnished—turns into a series of negotiations that reveal how even the smallest conveniences can become profit‑driven obstacles.

Through witty dialogue and meticulous lists of household items, the story captures the tension between idealism and the gritty realities of early‑20th‑century housing. As the couple weighs options, they expose the paradox of trying to “buy” comfort in a world where landlords count every ice‑pick and feather‑duster as a potential loss. Listeners will enjoy the blend of humor, social observation, and the relatable frustration of anyone who has ever searched for a place to call their own.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (346K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by An Anonymous Volunteer, and David Widger

Release date

1999-12-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Frank R. Stockton

Frank R. Stockton

1834–1902

Best known for the deliciously suspenseful tale The Lady, or the Tiger?, this 19th-century American writer mixed humor, fantasy, and clever moral puzzles in stories that still feel fresh. He also wrote popular fairy tales for children and a wide range of novels and short fiction.

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