The Human Interest: A Study in Incompatibilities

audiobook

The Human Interest: A Study in Incompatibilities

by Violet Hunt

EN·~6 hours·17 chapters

Chapters

17 total
1

THE HUMAN INTEREST

0:15
2

CHAPTER I

33:04
3

CHAPTER II

31:25
4

CHAPTER III

36:17
5

CHAPTER IV

37:35
6

CHAPTER V

29:13
7

CHAPTER VI

26:32
8

CHAPTER VII

15:13
9

CHAPTER VIII

20:52
10

CHAPTER IX

20:07

Description

A sharp‑tongued London author arrives in a drab Newcastle street, her thoughts already drifting between the city’s oppressive fog and the uniform rows of solemn houses. As she steps up to the door of a modest townhouse, she surveys the gaudy curtains, medieval knocker and over‑decorated interiors that clash with the gritty northern atmosphere. The narrative captures her witty inner commentary, setting up a lively contrast between the cultured expectations of a southern visitor and the understated, hard‑hearted world she finds herself in.

Inside, she is welcomed by Mrs. Elles, a modest solicitor’s wife whose polished appearance and eager hospitality mask a deeper tension between self‑importance and genuine connection. Their exchange teases the social rituals of the era—literary pretensions, artistic pretence, and the subtle power plays that unfold in parlors lined with books, piano scores and artificial bouquets. The opening promises a keen exploration of personality, class, and the uneasy dance of admiration versus boredom.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (374K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chuck Greif, ellinora and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2018-12-23

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Violet Hunt

Violet Hunt

1862–1942

A bold English writer who moved easily through the literary world of her time, she wrote sharp novels, ghostly tales, memoir, and biography. Her work is often linked with both the New Woman movement and early modern supernatural fiction.

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