
In a once‑fashionable suburb that has slipped into quiet decline, the Barnes family ekes out a modest life amid aging homes and the hum of a fading railroad. The story opens in the kitchen of the weather‑worn Barnes cottage, where Jane, a spirited twenty‑year‑old with a love for poetry, music, and everyday pleasures, brightens the morning by naming her percolator “Philomel” and filling the air with its imagined song. Her brother, Baldwin, a weary young man tethered to a monotonous government job, offers a sharp contrast—cynical, restless, yet undeniably drawn to Jane’s optimism.
Their banter over breakfast reveals a household balanced on the edge of change, hinting at hidden debts, lingering grief, and the subtle pressures of a community in transition. As the siblings navigate their small world of cracked steps, peeling paint, and the encroaching modernity of automobiles and trolleys, listeners are invited into a portrait of early‑20th‑century American life—rich with humor, quiet yearning, and the promise that even in dim surroundings, a faint light can still sing.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (395K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2019-08-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1869–1953
Known for warm, romantic novels with a strong sense of home and character, this once-bestselling American writer reached a huge audience in the early 20th century. Her stories often mixed sentiment, faith, and everyday drama in a way that made them especially popular with magazine and book readers of the time.
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