Novelleja ja kertomuksia I

audiobook

Novelleja ja kertomuksia I

by August Blanche, Minna Canth, Camille Dehas, Emilie Tegtmeyer

FI·~4 hours

Chapters

Description

A warm summer evening unfolds in a quiet Finnish village, where the lake glistens and the forest smells of pine. Young Elsa returns from picking strawberries, only to be startled by a lively stranger who greets her with familiar affection. Their brief exchange hints at old friendships and the promise of something new on the horizon.

Soon the chatter turns to the upcoming market, a bustling event that draws people from near and far. Elsa hesitates, uneasy about attending with Matti, while Antti urges her to join the festivities, insisting that the market offers both refreshment and community. The scene captures the lively rhythms of rural life and the subtle tensions that arise when tradition meets personal desire.

Details

Language

fi

Duration

~4 hours (269K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2008-09-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

August Blanche

August Blanche

1811–1868

A lively voice of 19th-century Stockholm, he wrote fiction, plays, and journalism with a sharp eye for city life and everyday people. His work made him one of Sweden’s best-known literary figures of his time.

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Minna Canth

Minna Canth

1844–1897

A bold Finnish writer and social critic, she helped bring realism into Finnish literature and used her work to challenge social injustice, especially the limits placed on women and the poor.

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CD

Camille Dehas

A little-known 19th-century writer, Camille Dehas survives in the record mostly through a handful of preserved texts rather than a well-documented public life. That air of mystery gives the work an extra pull for readers who enjoy rediscovering forgotten voices.

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Emilie Tegtmeyer

Emilie Tegtmeyer

1827–1903

A 19th-century German writer and teacher, remembered for the practical, educational spirit of her work and for writing for young readers. Her life stretched from rural Holstein to Bremen, where she died in 1903.

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