Pappiparka
About This Book
In a drought‑parched rural setting, a dying patriarch summons his two adult sons to give final counsel and arrange his modest estate, exposing quiet strains within the household. One son serves as a clergyman while the other remains a farmer, and neighbors' gossip about concealed wealth intensifies disputes over duty, inheritance and reputation. The household's hushed manner and simmering tensions reflect poverty, social judgment and competing obligations, as personal conscience and familial loyalty are tested when practical concerns about property and secrecy collide with moral expectations beneath an oppressive summer heat.
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