About This Book
The narrative follows George Faxon, who is stranded at a wintry junction when a host's neglect forces him into unexpected isolation; soon after he witnesses a friend's death and flees, haunted by a sense that he failed to intervene. He departs for distant tropical lands to recover from shock, where physical recuperation contrasts with persistent moral torment as newspaper reports reveal consequences of his absence. The story traces his psychological unraveling and attempts at escape, shifting between stark New England winter and lush foreign settings, and examines themes of guilt, responsibility, memory, and the inescapability of conscience.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
Mrs. Fitz
by J. C. Snaith
A Modern Cinderella; Or, The Little Old Shoe, and Other Stories
by Louisa May Alcott
Nights With Uncle Remus: Myths and Legends of the Old Plantation
by Joel Chandler Harris
Mackinac and Lake Stories
by Mary Hartwell Catherwood
The Complete Works of Artemus Ward (HTML edition)
by Artemus Ward
My Wayward Pardner; or, My Trials with Josiah, America, the Widow Bump, and Etcetery
by Marietta Holley





