
Part 1
Part 2
A young woman and her husband, a confident physician, retreat to a remote, sprawling estate for the summer, hoping the quiet will soothe her fragile nerves. The house, with its overgrown garden and a vast, sun‑filled nursery, feels both inviting and oddly oppressive, especially the room she is confined to, dominated by an unsettling yellow wallpaper. As she obeys her husband’s strict regimen of rest and isolation, she finds herself drawn to the paper’s chaotic pattern, seeking distraction from the constraints placed upon her.
The narrative unfolds as a vivid portrait of a mind wrestling with the expectations of a patriarchal world and the subtle creep of unease within the walls. Through intimate journal‑like entries, the narrator’s voice reveals a growing tension between prescribed “rest cure” and her yearning for mental stimulation and freedom. The story invites listeners to experience the slow, haunting descent into obsession, all set against the backdrop of a house that seems to whisper its own secrets.
Language
en
Duration
~32 minutes (31K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
1999-11-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1860–1935
Best known for "The Yellow Wallpaper," this pioneering American writer used fiction and essays to question the limits placed on women’s lives. Her work blends sharp social criticism with intensely personal insight, which is one reason it still feels strikingly modern.
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