The Romance of a Shop

audiobook

The Romance of a Shop

by Amy Levy

EN·~4 hours·25 chapters

Chapters

25 total
1

CHAPTER I. IN THE BEGINNING.

16:02
2

CHAPTER II. FRIENDS IN NEED.

20:13
3

CHAPTER III. WAYS AND MEANS.

10:29
4

CHAPTER IV. NUMBER TWENTY B.

18:19
5

CHAPTER V. THIS WORKING-DAY WORLD.

12:14
6

CHAPTER VI. TO THE RESCUE.

16:10
7

CHAPTER VII. A NEW CUSTOMER.

15:50
8

CHAPTER VIII. A DISTINGUISHED PERSON.

16:34
9

CHAPTER IX. SHOW SUNDAY.

16:04
10

CHAPTER X. SUMMING UP.

17:08

Description

In a quiet corner of Campden Hill, a once‑stately house now draped in the melancholy of an upcoming sale sits behind a walled garden blooming with spring. Its grand windows and a converted glass conservatory now serve as a makeshift photographer’s studio, filled with cameras, canvases, and scattered prints. Gertrude Lorimer, a young woman of twenty‑three, moves through the somber scene, her grief evident in the careful way she brushes stray hair from her forehead and steps into the bright, yet unsettling, light.

The Lorimer sisters—Gertrude, her older half‑sister Frances, and the youngest Phyllis—have been thrust together by a sudden reversal of fortune and the sudden death of their father. As they gather in the cluttered studio, the familiar surroundings feel oddly alien, echoing the bewildering loss that has upended their lives. Their quiet conversations hint at a shared determination to confront the mystery that has shattered their world.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (286K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by MWS, Martin Pettit 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

2018-07-05

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Amy Levy

Amy Levy

1861–1889

A brilliant late-Victorian writer, she brought wit, emotional sharpness, and social insight to poems, essays, and novels that still feel strikingly modern. Her work often explored Jewish identity, women’s independence, and the pressures of literary and social life.

View all books

You may also like