These CDs will play in any CD player at home or in your car.
Rose O' The River

Kate Douglas Wiggin
 (1856 - 1923)

Rose Wiley is a pretty country girl. She's engaged to Stephen Waterman, a country boy. She is quite content, until Claude Merril, a man from Boston, tells her that her love is ruining Stephen's life. A cute coming-of-age novel. 

Cast
Narrator/Mrs. Wiley: Elizabeth Klett
Stephen Waterman/Ike Billings: Charlotte Duckett
Rose Wiley: Libby Gohn
Mr. Wiley: MaryAnn
Under-Boss/Jed Towle/Long Abe/Bystanders/River Driver: John Trevithick
Ivory Dunn: Beth Thomas
Alcestis Crambry: David Lawrence
Mrs. Crambry/Mrs. Brooks/Teacher: Caprisha Page
Claude Merrill/Lije Dennett: Amanda Friday
Miss Dix: Kathryn Tipton
Mite Shapley: Grace Garrett
Rufus: Rookieblue

Run Time 2 Hours 44 Minutes in 3 Audio CDs

Section ---- Chapter ---- Run Time
1 01 - The Pine and the Rose - 13:25
2 02 - Old Kennebec - 14:09
3 03 - The Edgewood Drive - 11:00
4 04 - Blasphemous Swearing - 09:32
5 05 - The Game of Jackstraws - 15:59
6 06 - Hearts and Other Hearts - 12:18
7 07 - The Little House - 10:29
8 08 - The Garden of Eden - 08:24
9 09 - The Serpent - 11:02
10 10 - The Turquoise Ring - 09:28
11 11 - Rose Sees the World - 08:32
12 12 - Gold and Pinchbeck - 08:59
13 13 - A Country Chevalier - 14:16
14 14 - Housebreaking - 07:09
15 15 - The Dream Room - 10:00

  • Our Audiobooks are Complete and Unabridged (unless otherwise indicated)
  • Our Audiobooks are always read by real people, never by computers.
  • Please Note: These recorded readings are from the author's original works which are in the public domain. All recordings and artwork are in the public domain and there are no infringements or copyrights. Each track starts with "This is a LibriVox recording...."
  • Although Librivox has graciously made these recordings available to the public domain, they are not associated with the sale of this product.


Public domain books

A public-domain book is a book with no copyright, a book that was created without a license, or a book where its copyrights expired or have been forfeited.

In most countries the of copyright expires on the first day of January, 70 years after the death of the latest living author. The longest copyright term is in Mexico, which has life plus 100 years for all deaths since July 1928.

A notable exception is the United States, where every book and tale published before 1926 is in the public domain; American copyrights last for 95 years for books originally published between 1925 and 1978 if the copyright was properly registered and maintained.