
Set against the rolling woods of a Wisconsin coulee in 1864, the story opens with a young girl recalling a quiet Sunday at the Green’s farmhouse. A simple harvest feast turns magical when the neighbor, a lively seer, reads tea leaves that foretell a soldier’s return—only to have a weary, musket‑bearing figure appear on the road. The tender reunion between mother and son, framed by the rugged frontier landscape, introduces a world where hope and hardship walk hand in hand.
Through vivid recollections of family gatherings, folk superstitions, and the ever‑present wilderness, the narrator paints an intimate portrait of pioneer life. The narrative weaves together personal memory and the broader sweep of settlement, capturing the joys, anxieties, and resilient spirit of a generation forging a new existence on the American middle border. Listeners will feel the echo of the past in every crackling fire and whispered prophecy.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (788K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2009-05-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1860–1940
Best known for vivid stories of Midwestern farm life, this Pulitzer Prize–winning writer brought unusual honesty and sympathy to the struggles of ordinary people. His work helped shape American realism, especially in the memorable "Middle Border" books.
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