
A young Vandover drifts through his own past, clutching only fragmented snapshots of a life that began with the sudden, unsettling death of his mother in a bustling New York depot. The scene is rendered in vivid detail: the steam‑crowned locomotive, the weary porter, the sick woman’s final sigh—moments that will haunt him long after the train departs. As the memory fades, he is left to piece together the scattered images of his childhood, from the cramped carriage to a quiet backyard in San Francisco where a teenage boy idly watches his guinea‑pigs.
Settled in the rapidly expanding West, Vandover’s family tries to rebuild. His father, an aging entrepreneur, abandons a comfortable Eastern life to construct modest homes and cheap flats, hoping to secure a future for his son. Yet the city’s relentless growth and the lingering shadows of loss begin to shape Vandover’s ambitions, desires, and the restless energy that will drive him forward. The novel follows his struggle to forge an identity amid memory, ambition, and the raw forces of a changing America.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (553K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-01-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1870–1902
A major early voice of American naturalism, he wrote vivid, often unsettling fiction about greed, power, and the forces that shape ordinary lives. Though he died at just 32, his novels helped define a tougher, more modern kind of realism in American literature.
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