The Cobbler In The Devil's Kitchen

audiobook

The Cobbler In The Devil's Kitchen

by Mary Hartwell Catherwood

EN·~27 minutes

Chapters

Description

A rugged Irish cobbler has turned the eerie “Devil’s Kitchen,” a sea‑carved cavern on Mackinac’s shoreline, into his unconventional workshop. From a modest bench and a few belongings, he fashions sturdy shoes for voyageurs and traders, while the natural rock shelters his modest hearth, a fresh spring, and a view of the lake’s copper‑colored waters. His solitary routine is punctuated by the bustling summer crowd that trudges along the beach, bringing both business and the noisy clamor of French‑Canadian engagés and visiting Indians.

One quiet afternoon, as he stitches a pair of deer‑skin shoes for a homesick client, an unexpected visitor appears—a striking Sac girl named Blackbird, whose beauty has lingered in his thoughts since the previous summer. Their brief encounter hints at a subtle crossing of cultures amid the island’s lively tensions, promising a gentle unfolding of friendship and curiosity beneath the rugged beauty of the Great Lakes frontier.

Details

Full title

The Cobbler In The Devil's Kitchen From "Mackinac And Lake Stories", 1899

Language

en

Duration

~27 minutes (26K 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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