About This Book
The narrative follows a young girl, Dawn, whose childhood is shadowed by her mother's removal from the household and a bitter estrangement from her father and new stepmother; she clings to her mother's memory, rejects a new domestic order, and withdraws into solitude. Later, a recurring visitor, Harrington Winthrop, becomes a gentle catalyst for change as courtship and moral tests complicate her loyalties. The story traces domestic tension, personal pride, and the slow work of conscience and affection, moving between garden scenes of childhood rebellion and social encounters that force decisions about identity, forgiveness, and future attachments.
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