
In the mist‑cloaked hills of Glenavelin, a remote valley where sea breezes mingle with mountain winds, life moves at the pace of sheep‑herders and the occasional cart on a single winding road. The landscape is painted in vivid greens and heather, its quiet beauty hiding the ever‑present threat of sudden storms. This atmospheric setting, rooted in the closing years of the nineteenth century, frames a tale of ordinary people whose lives are tied to the land and its ancient rhythms.
On a rain‑soaked June evening a young driver named Lewie transports a mysterious, kindly old man—Doctor Gracey—through the glen. Their conversation, peppered with dry humor and hints of past acquaintances, reveals a world of modest duties, strained household hierarchies, and unspoken anxieties. As the dog‑cart trudges onward, listeners are drawn into the subtle tensions between duty and desire, setting the stage for a story that gently probes the cost of half‑hearted choices in a community where every decision echoes across the valleys.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (496K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by MRK HTML version by Chuck Greif
Release date
2005-11-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1875–1940
Best known for writing The Thirty-Nine Steps, this Scottish author mixed fast-moving adventure with a remarkable public career that reached all the way to Rideau Hall. His books helped shape the modern thriller, while his life also included work as a publisher, historian, politician, and Governor General of Canada.
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