A small New England town hides a sweeping tale of love, duty, and choice in the face of hardship.
In a quiet Connecticut village, a brilliant professor named Giles Brewster navigates illness, loyalty, and a changing world. As he receives care from devoted friends and neighbors, he finds his deepest feelings tested by aureness, hope, and the risk of losing the life he imagines with Ruth Huntington. The story follows friendships and family ties around Benjamin Gilbert’s home, where music, land, and small-town rituals frame a larger quest for meaning.
Across a landscape of hills, rivers, and porch music, the characters confront what it means to give and receive love. The book examines what a community owes to its gifted, vulnerable, and steadfast members—and what one young man must decide when the future seems uncertain.
- Experience a vivid portrait of early 20th-century New England life.
- Follow intimate relationships shaped by illness, care, and personal sacrifice.
- Witness the quiet, persistent pull of hope in a close-knit town.
- Meet a cast of memorable neighbors whose kindness and flaws drive the plot.
Ideal for readers who enjoy character-driven historical fiction about love, friendship, and the choices that define a life.