About This Book
The narrative sketches life in an early New England seaport through interwoven scenes of neighbors, sermons, household labors, and a slow courtship between a lively, resourceful widow and a reserved, contemplative man. It balances intimate domestic detail and community customs with reflective accounts of religious conviction, memory, and moral responsibility. Historic events and characters are adapted into the story’s incidents, while a secondary strand follows enslaved people whose conversations about liberty and the Declaration raise questions about freedom and conscience. The tone mixes affection for local manners with quiet moral inquiry.
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