When Gretel Was Fifteen

audiobook

When Gretel Was Fifteen

by Nina Rhoades

EN·~5 hours·17 chapters

Chapters

17 total
1

WHEN GRETEL WAS FIFTEEN

1:17
2

ILLUSTRATIONS

0:26
3

CHAPTER I THE GIRLS AT MISS MINTON’S

22:16
4

CHAPTER II EASTER IN WAR TIME

16:48
5

CHAPTER III BREAKING-UP DAY

18:12
6

CHAPTER IV FRÄULEIN SIELING MAKES A CALL

23:19
7

CHAPTER V OFF FOR NEW LONDON

18:44
8

CHAPTER VI AT THE CHESTERS’

21:36
9

CHAPTER VII GRETEL MEETS AN OLD FRIEND

20:29
10

CHAPTER VIII ADA EXPRESSES AN OPINION

22:19

Description

At Miss Minton’s girls’ school the ordinary rhythm of study and supper is shattered when the announcement of war arrives. The teachers and twelve pupils gather around a long table, each reacting in their own way—some with tears, others with fierce patriotism—while the quiet presence of a German instructor, Fräulein Sieling, adds an uneasy tension to the room.

In the midst of this turmoil sits fifteen‑year‑old Gretel Schiller, the daughter of a celebrated German pianist who now lives with an American step‑family. Her mixed heritage makes the news hit especially hard; she watches the world’s conflict through the eyes of both cultures, feeling loyalty to her father’s memory and to her new home. As classmates discuss past wars and speculate about the future, Gretel’s quiet resolve begins to surface, hinting at the personal choices she will soon face.

The story captures the intimate drama of adolescence caught in a larger historical storm, exploring themes of identity, friendship, and the courage required to navigate a world suddenly turned upside‑down.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (307K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2015-11-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

NR

Nina Rhoades

1863–1940

Best known for warm, old-fashioned stories for young readers, this American writer published a long run of children’s books under the pen name Nina Rhoades. Her fiction often centers on girls, family life, and everyday moral choices, giving it a gentle charm that still appeals to fans of classic juvenile literature.

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