
THE LEATHERWOOD GOD - By William Dean Howells
PUBLISHER'S NOTE
THE LEATHERWOOD GOD
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In the rolling valleys of early‑nineteenth‑century Ohio, a fledgling community clusters along Leatherwood Creek, its name taken from the tough bark that pioneers fashion into harnesses and tools. The settlers—farmers, craftsmen, and devout believers of varied denominations—have built a modest yet thriving town where log cabins sit beside the occasional brick house, and a single “Temple” gathers all under one roof for worship and fellowship. Life moves to the rhythm of corn, tobacco, and the occasional mill trip, a world insulated from the bustling politics of the East but rich in its own quiet resilience.
Into this orderly landscape appears Matthew Braile, a weather‑worn farmer who greets each sunrise with pipe smoke and the scent of fresh bacon. One August morning a lone rider arrives, balancing a sack of corn on a clay‑bank horse, his sudden presence stirring whispered rumors of a figure called the Leatherwood God. As the newcomer vanishes toward the mill, the townsfolk are left wondering whether this enigmatic visitor will simply pass through or awaken deeper currents hidden beneath their genteel routine.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (282K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nathan Harris, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks, David Widger and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
Release date
2005-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1837–1920
A leading voice of American literary realism, he helped shape late 19th-century fiction through his novels, criticism, and editorial work. His writing often brings ordinary social life into sharp, lively focus, with a calm wit that still feels fresh.
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by William Dean Howells

by William Dean Howells

by William Dean Howells

by William Dean Howells

by William Dean Howells

by William Dean Howells

by William Dean Howells

by William Dean Howells