WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Bread cover

Bread

Chapter 25: Transcriber's Notes:
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A struggling household headed by a music-teaching mother and her two daughters copes with chronic money shortages and the daily need to provide food. Narrative scenes track small domestic crises, errands, and exchanges with neighbors and shopkeepers, while tensions rise around pride, obligation, and survival. Through close attention to everyday detail and working-class interactions, the work examines class friction, ethical compromises within the family, and the social pressures that restrict opportunity and dignity. The tone remains realist and socially observant, shifting between intimate domestic moments and broader critiques of economic insecurity.

“Oh, Mitzi—Mitzi! I love you so—I love you so!”

THE END

Transcriber's Notes:

A number of typographical errors have been corrected silently.

Second section numbered 11 of Chapter II of Book II renumbered to section 12.

Table of Contents was augmented with chapter numbers.