Westways: A Village Chronicle

audiobook

Westways: A Village Chronicle

by S. Weir (Silas Weir) Mitchell

EN·~14 hours·60 chapters

Chapters

60 total

I DEDICATE THIS BOOK WHICH RECALLS CERTAIN SCENES OF THE CIVIL WAR TO THE MEMORY OF MY THREE BROTHERS - R.W.M. N.C.M. E.K.M. - ALL OF WHOM SERVED IN THE ARMIES OF THEIR COUNTRY - PREFACE

2:20

WESTWAYS - CHAPTER I

19:10

CHAPTER II

23:33

CHAPTER III

31:56

CHAPTER IV

29:07

CHAPTER V

34:43

CHAPTER VI

26:02

CHAPTER VII

18:32

CHAPTER VIII

39:52

CHAPTER IX

34:22

Description

Set in a modest Pennsylvania village before and during the Civil War, the story follows the intertwined lives of its residents, especially the Penhallow family. Through generations of frontiersmen, merchants, and soldiers, the narrative paints a vivid picture of a community where social rank and long‑standing customs shape daily existence, yet the tides of industry, travel, and politics begin to blur old boundaries. The opening introduces the rugged origins of the Penhallows, their rise through trade and mining, and the looming impact of national conflict on their tight‑knit world.

As the village confronts the pressures of war and modernization, readers watch relationships form and fray, fortunes rise and fall, and the quiet rhythms of rural life are tested by ambition and duty. The author’s keen eye for detail captures the atmosphere of a time when personal histories were as tangled as the roads that linked the hamlet to the wider world, offering a thoughtful glimpse into an era of change and continuity.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~14 hours (855K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-11-26

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

S. Weir (Silas Weir) Mitchell

S. Weir (Silas Weir) Mitchell

1829–1914

A pioneering American neurologist who also built a wide readership as a novelist and poet, he brought scientific curiosity and storytelling together in an unusual way. His life in Philadelphia and his Civil War medical work fed both his medical writing and his fiction.

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