
Sophy Decker is a sturdy, fifty‑year‑old milliner whose well‑made hats keep the women of Chippewa’s East End looking sharp and the mill hands modestly styled. Unmarried and often dismissed as a spinster, she runs a bustling shop with practical sense, a keen eye for fashion, and a generosity that extends far beyond her storefront. Listeners are invited into her world of bustling train rides, city trips, and the quiet moments when she slips a comforting word to a niece or sister.
The Decker sisters—Grace, Ella, and Flora—lean on Sophy for a safe place to unload their marital woes, trusting her steady, unpretentious wisdom. Though they view her with affectionate disapproval, Sophy’s easy humor and shrewd business sense make her the unofficial therapist of the family, hearing secrets that never quite reach the ears of husbands or other relatives. Her perspective, shaped by years of giving without expectation, offers a warm, observant lens on everyday life.
Through witty dialogue and vivid descriptions of small‑town America, the story paints a portrait of a woman whose quiet strength and unapologetic love of good food and good company make her more than a background character. Sophy’s modest existence, filled with honest work and understated compassion, resonates with anyone who has ever been the reliable, overlooked anchor in a bustling family.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (374K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Aaron Reed and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
Release date
2005-01-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1885–1968
A sharp-eyed storyteller of American ambition and reinvention, she turned everyday lives into big, memorable novels. Her books ranged from small-town newspaper offices to sprawling family sagas, and several became classic films and stage works.
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