The Light of the Star: A Novel

audiobook

The Light of the Star: A Novel

by Hamlin Garland

EN·~4 hours·23 chapters

Chapters

23 total
1

Transcriber's Note: Typo "gantlet" was replaced with "gauntlet" but all other spelling was retained as it appeared in the original text.

0:19
2

THE - LIGHT OF THE STAR - A Novel - BY - HAMLIN GARLAND - AUTHOR OF "HESPER" - "THE CAPTAIN OF THE GRAY-HORSE TROOP" - ETC. ETC.

0:10
3

NEW YORK AND LONDON - HARPER & BROTHERS - PUBLISHERS:: MCMIV

0:03
4

THE LIGHT OF THE STAR - I

25:18
5

II

13:05
6

III

9:33
7

IV

7:02
8

V

7:30
9

VI

15:03
10

VII

4:54

Description

A young playwright named Douglass spends his days wandering the bustling streets, his thoughts consumed by the luminous figure of the famed actress Helen Merival. He has never met her, yet every billboard, every theatre marquee seems to echo her enigmatic presence, fueling both his creative ambitions and a restless longing. As his manuscript sits unfinished, the anticipation of their imminent encounter becomes a quiet form of heroism, a way to measure his own worth against the dazzling aura that surrounds her.

The city itself feels like a stage, each window reflecting a different mask of Helen—glittering coquette, sorrowful muse, fierce baroness—leaving Douglass to wonder which version he will finally see. His memories of past loves flicker in contrast to the magnetic, ever‑changing portrait of the actress, whose voice carries a haunting blend of innocence and darkness. In the hours before their meeting, he grapples with the uneasy question of whether he is drawn to the woman behind the roles or to the characters she so vividly brings to life.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (242K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Yingling, Matt Whittaker, Bethanne M. Simms, David Garcia and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2009-04-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Hamlin Garland

Hamlin Garland

1860–1940

Best known for vivid stories of Midwestern farm life, this American realist writer drew deeply on his own family's years on the frontier. He later won the 1922 Pulitzer Prize for A Daughter of the Middle Border, part of the memoir series that helped secure his reputation.

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