About This Book
A working shoemaker in a crowded industrial neighborhood balances daily labor, family duties, and active engagement with cooperative and socialist ideas. Through his friendships, domestic scenes, parish life, and local gatherings the narrative follows personal choices, courtships, and moral debates that ripple outward into wider community efforts. The work moves from intimate domestic and emotional concerns to questions of social reform and then to dramatic communal trials that test loyalties and convictions. It examines the tension between idealism and practical survival, and between religious faith and calls for collective action, showing how ordinary lives confront ethical demands and the costs of solidarity.
About the Author
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