The Mothers Of Honoré

audiobook

The Mothers Of Honoré

by Mary Hartwell Catherwood

EN·~23 minutes

Chapters

Description

The story opens on the shimmering waters of Mackinac Island, where the sudden calm after a storm paints the lake in violet, green, red, and bronze. Jules McCarty, a solitary widower, lingers at his gate, half‑blind and still cloaked in melancholy, as the island’s residents exchange weary condolences after the death of his wife. Their banter, steeped in local dialect, hints at the tangled web of relationships that bind the small community together.

Beyond the grief, the narrative follows the quiet strength of Melinda Crée, one of the island’s few pure‑blooded Indians, and her granddaughter Clethera, a spirited girl caught between two worlds. Melinda’s herbal wisdom and her reluctant ties to the encroaching ways of the settlers offer a glimpse of cultural resilience, while the looming need for money to cover burial costs pulls the characters toward uneasy choices. The first act weaves loss, tradition, and the promise of new alliances against a vivid, lakeside backdrop.

Details

Full title

The Mothers Of Honoré From "Mackinac And Lake Stories", 1899

Language

en

Duration

~23 minutes (22K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger

Release date

2007-10-30

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Mary Hartwell Catherwood

Mary Hartwell Catherwood

1847–1902

A popular American novelist and short-story writer of the late 19th century, she became especially known for vivid historical fiction set in early North America. Her work blends careful research with lively storytelling, bringing frontier settlements and French colonial life into sharp focus.

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