Jane of Lantern Hill
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Beschrijving
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Jane of Lantern Hill (1937) is one of L. M. Montgomery's late domestic romances, a finely shaped story of a child's moral awakening and a family's restoration. Jane Stuart, constrained in a chilly Toronto household by her imperious grandmother, discovers freedom, competence, and affection during a summer with her father on Prince Edward Island. Montgomery's prose mingles comedy, lyrical landscape description, and psychologically astute domestic realism, placing the novel in conversation with her Anne books while giving it a more intimate concern with divorce, estrangement, and a child's agency. Lucy Maud Montgomery, the celebrated Canadian author of Anne of Green Gables, drew repeatedly on the imaginative geography of Prince Edward Island and on her own experience of emotional displacement. Raised largely by grandparents and acquainted with loneliness, longing, and the consolations of nature and storytelling, Montgomery understood the inner life of children with unusual seriousness. Her later years, marked by personal strain, sharpened her interest in homes both oppressive and healing. This novel is warmly recommended to readers who value classic children's fiction with emotional depth, elegant prose, and a strong sense of place. Jane's courage, practicality, and hunger for belonging make her one of Montgomery's most satisfying heroines.
Jane of Lantern Hill (1937) is one of L. M. Montgomery's late domestic romances, a finely shaped story of a child's moral awakening and a family's restoration. Jane Stuart, constrained in a chilly Toronto household by her imperious grandmother, discovers freedom, competence, and affection during a summer with her father on Prince Edward Island. Montgomery's prose mingles comedy, lyrical landscape description, and psychologically astute domestic realism, placing the novel in conversation with her Anne books while giving it a more intimate concern with divorce, estrangement, and a child's agency. Lucy Maud Montgomery, the celebrated Canadian author of Anne of Green Gables, drew repeatedly on the imaginative geography of Prince Edward Island and on her own experience of emotional displacement. Raised largely by grandparents and acquainted with loneliness, longing, and the consolations of nature and storytelling, Montgomery understood the inner life of children with unusual seriousness. Her later years, marked by personal strain, sharpened her interest in homes both oppressive and healing. This novel is warmly recommended to readers who value classic children's fiction with emotional depth, elegant prose, and a strong sense of place. Jane's courage, practicality, and hunger for belonging make her one of Montgomery's most satisfying heroines.
AmazonPagina's: 180, Paperback, Sharp Ink