The Children of Cupa

audiobook

The Children of Cupa

by Mary Ellen Mannix

EN·~3 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total
1

THE CHILDREN OF CUPA.

0:16
2

CHAPTER I. SUMMER PLANS.—THE CUPEÑOS.

13:02
3

CHAPTER II. THE JOURNEY.—FRANCISCO.

20:03
4

CHAPTER III. AT THE SPRING.

15:59
5

CHAPTER IV. THE MISSIONARY.

13:17
6

CHAPTER V. AT CHURCH.

14:29
7

CHAPTER VI. DIONYSIO AND MARGARITA.

16:13
8

CHAPTER VII. THE PEDLAR.

14:56
9

CHAPTER VIII. FALSELY ACCUSED.

14:35
10

CHAPTER IX. A JAUNT.—THE VALLEY OF THE RATTLESNAKES.

15:43

Description

A family gathered around a sick mother, hoping to find a place that will finally bring her health back. With the school year ending and a summer vacation looming, the parents, aunt, and two children weigh the options of seaside cottages, mountain retreats, and a remote spring known for its healing waters. Their doctor warns against noisy beaches and flimsy beachfront cabins, while the father proposes a camping adventure with a trusted cook to keep everyone comfortable.

The conversation turns to Warner’s Ranch, a valley spring once used by the local Indians and now praised for its restorative climate. The children, especially the eager thirteen‑year‑old, imagine the excitement of staying in an Indian village and the promise of clean, spacious tents. As they quietly check on their mother’s improving condition, the family prepares to decide whether a change of scenery in the rugged hills might be the cure they all need.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (178K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Larry B. Harrison and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2017-10-30

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

ME

Mary Ellen Mannix

1846–1938

A well-known Catholic writer of her time, she published fiction, children's books, biographies, essays, reviews, poetry, and translations. Her work often brought religious history and family life to a broad popular audience.

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