
In a warm November evening, a mother and her daughter sit together by a modest fire, surrounded by a room stripped of excess but filled with carefully chosen comforts. Ann pores over a seed catalogue, her mind racing with the possibilities of roses named for royalty and delphiniums that could crown a summer lawn. Her mother, knitting calmly, listens as Ann sketches a future garden, her imagination turning each flower name into a promise of color and scent.
The conversation turns to the Green Glen, a remote plot that Ann has inherited and transformed into a modest white‑faced house she calls “Dreams.” While her mother doubts the practicality of such a venture—questioning the lack of fences and the challenges of a steep, six‑mile road—Ann’s enthusiasm is unmistakable. Their exchange reveals a tender clash of practicality and idealism, setting the stage for a story about family, perseverance, and the quiet hope that a simple garden can become a sanctuary.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (365K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Al Haines
Release date
2016-11-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1877–1948
Best known for warm, witty novels set in small-town Scotland, this much-loved Scottish writer created stories full of community, kindness, and sharp observation. Writing as O. Douglas, she became a popular voice of interwar fiction and is still remembered for books like Penny Plain and The Proper Place.
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