
On a warm summer twilight in the corn‑shipping town of Caxton, thirteen‑year‑old Sam McPherson walks the cracked station platform with a bundle of newspapers tucked under his arm and a cigar in hand. His deliberate steps and the habit of tilting his chin give him an air of quiet determination as he heads toward Main Street, where the town’s daily rhythms unfold. Sam’s mind is constantly at work, counting on his fingers, a habit that hints at both his youth and his ambition.
The street buzzes with familiar faces: the jovial baggage‑man Jerry Donlin, the booming singer Freedom Smith leading a ragged chorus, and the impeccably dressed John Telfer, a former art student turned town dandy who carries a cane as if it were a wand. Telfer’s flamboyant presence and his effortless charm dominate the scene, earning Sam’s quiet admiration. As the evening song swells, Sam finds himself caught between the simple pleasures of small‑town life and the larger, almost theatrical world that Telfer seems to embody.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (586K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Text file produced by Anne Soulard, Eric Eldred, John R. Bilderback, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team HTML file produced by David Widger
Release date
2005-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1876–1941
Best known for "Winesburg, Ohio," this major American writer helped reshape the modern short story with intimate, psychologically sharp portraits of small-town life. His work also opened doors for younger writers, including Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner.
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