Slippy McGee, Sometimes Known as the Butterfly Man

audiobook

Slippy McGee, Sometimes Known as the Butterfly Man

by Marie Conway Oemler

EN·~10 hours·22 chapters

Chapters

22 total
1

FOREWORD

0:34
2

CHARACTERS

0:46
3

CHAPTER I ToC - APPLEBORO

25:01
4

CHAPTER IIToC - THE COMING OF SLIPPY MCGEE

28:43
5

CHAPTER IIIToC - NEIGHBORS

16:34
6

CHAPTER IVToC - UNDERWINGS

26:49
7

CHAPTER VToC - ENTER KERRY

47:39
8

CHAPTER VIToC - "THY SERVANT WILL GO AND FIGHT WITH THIS PHILISTINE" 1 Sam. 17: 32.

27:00
9

CHAPTER VIIToC - THE GOING OF SLIPPY MCGEE

31:24
10

CHAPTER VIIIToC - THE BUTTERFLY MAN

22:37

Description

In the sleepy town of Appleboro, South Carolina, life rolls on beneath the watchful eyes of a colorful cast: a devoted priest, a sharp‑tongued newspaper editor, a genteel lady of the New South, and a host of locals whose stories intertwine like the moths and butterflies that flutter over the fields. The narrator’s voice, seasoned with humor and a hint of melancholy, offers a wry commentary on love, loss, and the ever‑present “Game” that each resident seems to be playing.

At the heart of this tapestry is Slippy McGee, affectionately called the Butterfly Man. Known for his uncanny ability to coax delicate creatures from the woods and for his quiet, observant nature, Slippy becomes an unlikely confidant to the townspeople, bridging the gap between their everyday worries and the larger mysteries of faith and destiny.

The novel unfolds with a warm, folksy charm, inviting listeners to savor the rhythms of Southern life while gently probing the deeper questions of purpose and redemption that linger beneath the surface.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (617K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Janet Kegg, Jeannie Howse and the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net).

Release date

2005-05-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

MC

Marie Conway Oemler

1879–1932

A Georgia novelist with a gift for lively storytelling, she found a wide audience with popular fiction in the early 20th century. Her work appeared in major magazines as well as in novels that later reached readers through film and library collections.

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