The Honorable Peter Stirling and What People Thought of Him
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About This Book
The novel centers on Peter Stirling, a man of modest mill-village origins whose practical, unromantic temperament clashes with the expectations and gossip of his social circle. Told through salon scenes, domestic episodes, and the talkative judgments of acquaintances such as Mr. Pierce, the narrative explores how reputation is formed, sustained, and misread. Episodes move between light social satire and quieter psychological observation, probing tensions among class background, public honor, private feeling, and romantic longing. The work emphasizes perception over melodrama, showing how small acts, conversation, and assumption shape a man’s standing in a vigilant, talkative community.
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