
He drifts back to the New York of his youth, a bustling metropolis of horse‑drawn carriages, clattering wheels, and bright opera houses where music once seemed to lift the very air. The city is painted as a place of boundless energy, where strangers crossed paths on crowded streets and evenings glowed with the promise of adventure. That vivid memory now feels distant, a faded backdrop to the quieter life he now leads.
In a modest red‑brick house on the West Side lives Roger Gale, a rugged man nearing sixty, his hair threaded with silver and his face etched with years. Each Friday he welcomes his eldest daughter, Edith, for a game of chess that has become a ritual of gentle rivalry and soft conversation. As they sit by the fire, the slow rhythm of their moves mirrors the steady flow of family life, hinting at both the comfort of tradition and the unspoken longing for days gone by.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (522K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Rick Niles, Melissa Er-Raqabi and the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team
Release date
2004-12-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1880–1950
A journalist-novelist who brought the upheavals of early 20th-century America and Russia to life, he became the first winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. His work mixes on-the-ground reporting with a strong interest in ordinary people caught inside major social change.
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