Sons and Fathers

audiobook

Sons and Fathers

by Harry Stillwell Edwards

EN·~11 hours·62 chapters

Chapters

62 total
1

E-text prepared by Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive/American Libraries (http://www.archive.org/details/americana)

0:24
2

SONS AND FATHERS - BY HARRY STILLWELL EDWARDS.

9:37
3

SONS AND FATHERS

0:01
4

CHAPTER I. - TWO SONS.

7:31
5

CHAPTER II. - THE STRANGER ON THE THRESHOLD.

13:37
6

CHAPTER III. - A BREATH FROM THE OLD SOUTH.

13:24
7

CHAPTER IV. - THE MOTHER'S ROOM.

11:22
8

CHAPTER V. - THE STRANGER IN THE LIBRARY.

11:26
9

CHAPTER VI. - "WHO SAYS THERE CAN BE A 'TOO LATE' FOR THE IMMORTAL MIND?"

15:12
10

CHAPTER VII. - "BACK! WOULD YOU MURDER HER?"

14:04

Description

At a modest Gulf‑coast station in the summer of 1888, two young men cross paths, each a study in contrast. One is a slender, city‑schooled figure in a crisp cut‑away coat and derby, his movements measured and his gaze thoughtful. The other, broader and more free‑spirited, wears a plain gray cassimere suit and carries hefty leather trunks, his easy smile winning quick courtesy from strangers. Their brief encounter hints at the clash of ambition and reflection that will thread through their lives.

A striking young woman, Miss Kitty Blair, sits nearby, eyeing a pamphlet while the station’s quarantine officer questions her travel plans amid a yellow‑fever scare. When the officer demands proof of a clean residence, the gray‑clad stranger steps in, offering his word and a promise of letters to vouch for her. His confident intervention not only spares her immediate trouble but also introduces a web of family ties and regional loyalties that will shape the choices of all three travelers.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (684K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2011-05-14

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Harry Stillwell Edwards

Harry Stillwell Edwards

1855–1938

A Georgia journalist and storyteller with a sharp ear for local speech, he turned Southern life into fiction that reached a huge national audience. Best known for Eneas Africanus, he also wrote poems, novels, and long-running newspaper sketches that kept readers coming back.

View all books

You may also like