The Secret Garden: A Young Reader's Edition of the Classic Story

Front Cover
Trust Media Distribution, 1991 - Juvenile Fiction - 282 pages
A beautiful hardcover edition of a timeless classic, with illustrations by Lauren Child. Young, orphaned Mary Lennox is sent to live with her reclusive uncle, Archibald Craven. All but ignored by Craven, and kept away from her sickly cousin Colin, Mary happens upon a secret, walled garden. As she starts to work in it, the garden begins to flourish, and so do Mary and her new family. With an unjacketed fabric cover, six full color plates, and colored endpapers, everything about this hardcover edition is high-end and luxurious.

Contents

Theres No One Left
1
Mistress Mary Quite Contrary
8
Across the Moor
18
Martha
23
The Cry in the Corridor
41
There Was Some One CryingThere Was
49
The Key of the Garden
57
The Robin Who Showed the Way
64
Nest Building
144
I Wont Said Mary
157
A Tantrum
165
Tha Munnot Waste No Time
173
It Has Come
181
I Shall Live Forever
193
Ben Weatherstaff
202
When the Sun Went Down
214

The Strangest House
73
Dickon
84
The Nest of the Missel Thrush
97
Might I Have a Bit of Earth?
106
I Am Colin
116
A Young Rajah
131
Magic
220
Let Them Laugh
234
The Curtain
247
Its Mother
255
In the Garden
266

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About the author (1991)

Frances Hodgson Burnett wrote for children and adults, publishing both plays and novels. She was born in Manchester, England, on November 24, 1849. Her father, who owned a furniture store, died when she was only four years old. Her mother struggled to keep the family business running while trying to raise five children. Finally, because of the failing Manchester economy, the family sold the store and immigrated to the United States. In 1865 they settled just outside of Knoxville, Tennessee. Hoping to offset her family's continuing financial troubles, Burnett began to submit her stories to women's magazines. She was immediately successful. In the late 1860s her stories were published in nearly every popular American magazine. Burnett helped to support her family with income from the sale of her stories, even saving enough to finance a trip back to England, where she stayed for over a year. In 1879, Burnett published her first stories for children; two of her most popular are A Little Princess and The Secret Garden. In contrast to an extremely successful career, Burnett's personal life held many challenges. Her son Lionel was diagnosed with tuberculosis at age 15, from which he never recovered. His death inspired several stories about dead or dying children. Burnett lived her later years on Long Island, New York. She died in 1924.

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