Kertoelmia

audiobook

Kertoelmia

by Cornelia Levetzow

FI·~9 hours

Chapters

Description

A quiet winter evening in a modest Finnish town sets the stage for a series of intimate snapshots of everyday life. In a bustling restaurant hall, a small, dark‑clad boy named Erkki is handed a glass of milk by a stern, watchful guardian, his eyes darting between curiosity and caution. Around him, a household of vivid personalities—an assertive young lady weaving silk, a domineering patriarch, and a nervous mother—exchange sharp words that hint at hidden tensions and unspoken expectations.

The opening follows Erkki as he navigates this new environment, feeling both the weight of authority and the yearning for belonging. Small gestures—a tentative touch, a hesitant smile—reveal his fragile hope to be accepted among the family’s tangled dynamics. Through these early moments, the story gently explores themes of innocence, power, and the quiet resilience of a child trying to find his place in a world that seems both welcoming and bewildering.

Details

Language

fi

Duration

~9 hours (544K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Juhani Kärkkäinen and Tapio Riikonen

Release date

2019-09-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Cornelia Levetzow

Cornelia Levetzow

1836–1921

A Danish novelist and storyteller, she wrote about women's lives, social expectations, and emotional independence with unusual insight for her time. Her books won readers in Denmark and abroad, and her early fiction is still noted as an important contribution to 19th-century women's literature.

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