The End of the World: A Love Story

audiobook

The End of the World: A Love Story

by Edward Eggleston

EN·~6 hours·52 chapters

Chapters

52 total

The End of the World.

0:01

A LOVE STORY,

0:00

BY - EDWARD EGGLESTON - AUTHOR OF "THE HOOSIER SCHOOLMASTER," ETC. - WITH THIRTY-TWO ILLUSTRATIONS. - 1872

0:06

PREFACE. - [IN THE POTENTIAL MOOD.]

7:11

ILLUSTRATIONS. - BY FRANK BEARD

0:51

THE END OF THE WORLD.

0:01

CHAPTER I. - IN LOVE WITH A DUTCHMAN.

12:17

CHAPTER II. - AN EXPLOSION.

6:26

CHAPTER III. - A FAREWELL.

10:10

CHAPTER IV. - A COUNTER-IRRITANT.

4:47

Description

A playful, self‑aware romance unfolds against the backdrop of the Ohio Valley’s rolling farms and small‑town charm. The narrator’s witty preface sets the tone, poking fun at the conventions of introductions while hinting at a cast of vivid characters—August, Julia, Jonas, Cynthy Ann, and a shaggy lord of Shady‑Hollow Castle—each poised to cross paths with the central pair. As the story begins, love sparks amid everyday scenes of ferry rides, hand‑kerchiefed farewells, and the gentle rhythms of rural life, inviting listeners to feel the warmth of affection grounded in a lived, earthy world.

The early chapters blend humor and sentiment, capturing the nervous excitement of new relationships while gently lampooning the literary world’s pretensions. With charming illustrations imagined in the mind’s eye, the narrative balances heartfelt moments and light‑hearted commentary, making it an inviting listen for anyone who enjoys a love story that’s as sincere as it is delightfully self‑referential.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (370K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Rick Niles, John Hagerson, Charlie Kirschner and the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team.

Release date

2004-11-15

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Edward Eggleston

Edward Eggleston

1837–1902

Best known for bringing Indiana frontier life vividly onto the page, this 19th-century American writer moved from the pulpit to fiction and history. His books helped popularize a more realistic picture of everyday people in the Midwest.

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