Pembroke: A Novel

audiobook

Pembroke: A Novel

by Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman

EN·~7 hours

Chapters

Description

Set in a modest New England village, the story paints a vivid portrait of everyday lives tangled in stubborn habits and quiet longings. From a man who refuses to step across a freshly painted kitchen floor to neighbors whose pride keeps them aloof on church steps, the narrative captures the stubborn will that defines so many of its inhabitants. The town’s rhythm, shaded by elm‑lined streets and white cottages, becomes a backdrop for exploring how small grievances can echo larger, deeper conflicts.

At the heart of the tale is Barnabas Thayer, a physically bent man whose inner stiffness mirrors his outward posture. His love for Charlotte Barnard awakens a yearning for a self‑less devotion that might lift him beyond his own limitations. As his affection deepens, the possibility emerges that love alone could untangle the knots of his will and restore a sense of balance.

Through a cast of similarly marked characters—Deborah, Richard, Cephas—the novel examines how personal convictions shape community life. It invites listeners to consider whether true healing lies in the capacity to love beyond self‑interest, a theme that resonates long after the first act unfolds.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (440K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Jeff Kaylin

Release date

2005-12-31

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman

Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman

1852–1930

Best known for vivid New England stories, this American writer brought small-town lives, quiet struggles, and sharp social observation to the page. Her fiction includes the much-loved collection A New England Nun and helped define regional writing in the late 19th century.

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