
audiobook
In a lone schoolhouse tucked among the towering red firs of the Pacific Northwest, a new day begins with sunlight spilling across cedar floors and the scent of fresh timber. The classroom buzzes with children’s chatter until a rugged, French‑Canadian trader bursts in, his presence as stark as the wilderness outside. He confronts Mose, a boy of mixed heritage, sparking a tense clash that reveals the cultural frictions of a frontier community still finding its footing.
At the center stands the teacher, a steady, bright‑eyed woman whose calm authority diffuses the danger. She guides the class through songs and lessons, even pulling out a globe to demonstrate that the earth is round—a simple truth that both comforts and challenges the young minds around her. As the bell rings and the trader’s curiosity softens, listeners are invited into a vivid portrait of early settlement life, where education, identity, and the raw beauty of the woods intertwine.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (507K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-04-05
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
1860–1956
A novelist of the Pacific Northwest, she turned early memories of frontier Washington into fiction filled with forests, settlers, and regional life. Her best-known books include The Heart of the Red Firs, The Strain of White, and The Rim of the Desert.
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