
When a wealthy Creole husband dies unexpectedly, his young widow inherits a sprawling four‑thousand‑acre cotton plantation along the Cane River. Overwhelmed by grief, she retreats into a quiet routine, watching over the fields from her wide verandas while the world beyond her estate changes with the arrival of a new railroad. The peaceful rhythm of plantation life is shattered when a trusted relative warns her that someone is stealing cotton seed under cover of darkness.
Stirred from her mourning, she feels a renewed sense of duty to protect the land that has sustained her family for generations. As the railway brings strangers and modern conveniences, she must decide whether to cling to tradition or adapt to the inevitable transformation of her world. The story unfolds amid the lush Louisiana landscape, exploring themes of loss, responsibility, and the quiet strength that emerges when a woman confronts both personal and societal upheaval.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (323K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Bernard Koloski
Release date
2007-12-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1850–1904
Best known for "The Awakening," she wrote fiction that quietly challenged the social rules of her time. Her stories of women, marriage, freedom, and life in Louisiana helped make her one of the most important American writers of the late 19th century.
View all books