Because of Stephen follows a young woman whose obligation to Stephen - a figure whose welfare anchors her choices - recasts love, work, and social standing. Hill renders parlors, boardinghouses, and offices with lucid domestic detail, balancing romance with forthright evangelical purpose. Episodic yet swift, the story is marked by prayer, Scripture, and providential turns that test integrity against polite cruelty and class pretension. As American Protestant domestic fiction, it bridges late sentimentalism and the cleaner lines of modern popular narrative. Grace Livingston Hill (1865-1947), daughter of a Presbyterian minister and niece of devotional novelist "Pansy" (Isabella Macdonald Alden), wrote from a life steeped in church work and practical charity. Early widowhood and the need to support family sharpened her sense of women's economic vulnerability, while evangelical formation anchored her insistence on conscience, conversion, and everyday holiness. Those pressures and convictions shape the book's calm assurance that moral courage, exercised in ordinary rooms, can redirect a life. Recommended to readers of classic inspirational fiction and scholars of women's popular writing, Because of Stephen offers a gracious, suspense-touched meditation on duty, faith, and the costs of kindness. It will particularly reward anyone seeking clean romance with substantive spiritual and social texture.
Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.