Sister Carrie

audiobook

Sister Carrie

by Theodore Dreiser

EN·~15 hours·48 chapters

Chapters

48 total
1

SISTER CARRIE

2:23
2

CHAPTER I THE MAGNET ATTRACTING: A WAIF AMID FORCES

18:58
3

CHAPTER II WHAT POVERTY THREATENED: OF GRANITE AND BRASS

12:38
4

CHAPTER III WE QUESTION OF FORTUNE: FOUR-FIFTY A WEEK

21:34
5

CHAPTER IV THE SPENDINGS OF FANCY: FACTS ANSWER WITH SNEERS

25:23
6

CHAPTER V A GLITTERING NIGHT FLOWER: THE USE OF A NAME

14:40
7

CHAPTER VI THE MACHINE AND THE MAIDEN: A KNIGHT OF TO-DAY

24:08
8

CHAPTER VII THE LURE OF THE MATERIAL: BEAUTY SPEAKS FOR ITSELF

22:16
9

CHAPTER VIII INTIMATIONS BY WINTER: AN AMBASSADOR SUMMONED

15:01
10

CHAPTER IX CONVENTION'S OWN TINDER-BOX: THE EYE THAT IS GREEN

14:49

Description

A young woman named Caroline leaves her modest farm in the Midwest with only a trunk, a few dollars, and a scrap of paper bearing her sister’s address. The train carries her toward Chicago, a city whose glittering lights and bustling streets promise possibilities far beyond the quiet fields she knows. As the countryside blurs away, she feels a mix of nervous excitement and the faint ache of parting from home.

Arriving in the great metropolis, Caroline is drawn into a world of dazzling theater, lively cafes, and strangers whose ambitions mirror her own. She quickly discovers that the city’s allure comes with both opportunity and uncertainty, as she navigates work, friendships, and the subtle pull of romance. Her journey captures the restless hope and the harsh realities of chasing a brighter future in an urban America that is as unforgiving as it is captivating.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~15 hours (874K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (from scanned pages available at the Internet Archive)

Release date

2004-03-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Theodore Dreiser

Theodore Dreiser

1871–1945

Best known for Sister Carrie and An American Tragedy, this major American novelist wrote with unusual bluntness about ambition, poverty, desire, and the pressures of modern life. His stories helped push U.S. fiction toward a tougher, more realistic style.

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