The Angel of the Tenement

audiobook

The Angel of the Tenement

by George Madden Martin

EN·~2 hours·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total
1

E-text prepared by David Garcia, Tamise Totterdell, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Kentuckiana Digital Library (http://kdl.kyvl.org/)

0:34
2

THE ANGEL OF THE TENEMENT.

0:01
3

CHAPTER I. THE ADVENT OF THE ANGEL.

15:00
4

CHAPTER II. THE ENTERTAINERS OF THE ANGEL.

9:56
5

CHAPTER III. INTRODUCES THE LITTLE MAJOR.

11:39
6

CHAPTER IV. THE ANGEL BECOMES A FAIRY.

18:54
7

CHAPTER V. THE ANGEL RESCUES MR. TOMLIN.

17:12
8

CHAPTER VI. THE MAJOR SUPERINTENDS THE ANGEL'S EDUCATION.

18:11
9

CHAPTER VII. MISS RUTH MAKES THE ACQUAINTANCE OF OLD G. A. R.

8:52
10

CHAPTER VIII. THE ANGEL MEETS AN OLD FRIEND.

11:20

Description

In a cramped, bustling tenement on a sweltering July morning, a circle of resident women gathers around a startling discovery—a tiny, crying infant draped in a delicate white gown. The child, who insists she is an “angel,” has been found alone in a vacant room, sparking a flurry of questions about who left her there and why. As Miss Carew, Miss Bonkowski, and the kindly Mrs. O’Maligan coax the baby’s trembling words, the building’s close‑knit community is drawn into a puzzling mystery that feels both intimate and oddly otherworldly.

The narrative captures the gritty realities of tenement life—laundry work, cramped quarters, and the strong bonds among its inhabitants—while the infant’s cryptic pleas for “Yosie” and her mother hint at secrets hidden behind the walls. Listeners are invited to step into this vividly rendered world, where every whispered speculation could unravel a deeper story waiting just beyond the hallway door.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (131K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2007-11-16

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

George Madden Martin

George Madden Martin

1866–1946

Best known for the warmly observed Emmy Lou stories, this Kentucky writer captured childhood with humor, sympathy, and an eye for everyday social life. She also built a long career in fiction and drama while taking an active interest in civic and cultural causes.

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