Autoren-Bilder

Evelyn Smith (1885–1928)

Autor von Seven Sisters at Queen Anne's

42+ Werke 324 Mitglieder 20 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Beinhaltet den Namen: Evelyn Smith

Reihen

Werke von Evelyn Smith

Seven Sisters at Queen Anne's (1923) 36 Exemplare
Val Forrest in the Fifth (1925) 33 Exemplare
The First Fifth Form (1926) 29 Exemplare
Septima at School (1925) 26 Exemplare
Phyllida in Form III (1927) 21 Exemplare
The Small Sixth Form (1927) 18 Exemplare
Binkie of IIIB (1923) 17 Exemplare
Nicky of the Lower Fourth (2015) 17 Exemplare
Milly in the Fifth (1928) 15 Exemplare
Terry's Best Term (1926) 13 Exemplare
Marie Macleod, Schoolgirl (1928) 13 Exemplare
The Little Betty Wilkinson (1924) 11 Exemplare
Biddy and Quilla (1936) 10 Exemplare
The Twins at School (1927) 9 Exemplare

Zugehörige Werke

Blackie's Girls' Annual (1929) — Mitwirkender — 3 Exemplare
Blackie's Girls' Annual (1927) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

A nice collection of plays adapted for classrooms: Ameliaranne, Cinema Star; Tom Sawyer; Through the Looking-Glass; Rip Van Winkle; The Rose and the Ring; David Copperfield with his Aunt; The Pied Piper of Hamelin; The Tinder-Box; Hansel and Gretel; The Pilgrim's Progress; The Pardoner's Tale of the Three Men Who Wished to Kill Death; King John and the Abbot of Canterbury; Get Up and Bar the Door; Joseph and His Brethren; and David and Goliath. All presented in a nice little book.
 
Gekennzeichnet
gmillar | Nov 4, 2021 |
I received a copy to facilitate my review. The opinions expressed here are my own.


I have reviewed several memoirs. This one made me contemplate many things. This is the life story of a woman who fell in love with a young Navy soldier. They married before he shipped off to Korea. What was supposed to be three months turned into almost a year of separation. From the beginning I saw how strong a woman she was. It made me wonder why she would give in to her husband’s thoughts on everything. Then I looked at the time period. I wasn’t born until the late 50’s. Even then young ladies were expected to behave a certain way. Women ‘had their place’ in society. I was surprised at how long she and her husband John were together. I wondered how she could have been so blind to the signs that things were not well with her marriage. Then I thought about my own first marriage and was suddenly able to identify with her. She did find love again. That didn’t mean things were real smooth. I understood the “first marriage baggage”. This story made me ponder several things. When my son, newly married, joined the army his new wife was ecstatic. She had all of these ideas of what army life would be like. We tried to tell her about the loneliness she would feel when he was gone, even with family to surround her. He wasn’t even shipped out of the states when she left him. He found another woman shortly thereafter who embraced the military life he loved. She supported him when he was shipped to South Korea. I thought about Evelyn’s concern while her husband was there. As a mother I was worried when my son was stationed there so close to the demilitarized zone.

I felt very sad for her and the relationship she lost with her daughter. I have a relationship with my daughter, but she is closer to her father her left me and the kids for another woman. I don’t understand why her daughter treated her the way she did. However, I drew strength from her story. The old saying that nothing is fair in love and war rang so true. I applaud this author and the strength her story shows to women everywhere, no matter what their walk in life. This was a wonderful story. Through heartache comes strength and hope.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
skstiles612 | Dec 7, 2016 |
This is book number 12 of the Kings Treasuries of Literature Series. This was obviously designed by the series general editor, Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, as an aid to teachers in their endeavours to introduce pupils to the art of drama. It contains 13 abbreviated plays annotated with advice for classroom production: The Swineherd and The Travelling Companion fro Hans Andersen; The Parlement of Foules and The Cock and the Fox from Chaucer; Thor's Hammer and The Death of Balder from Norse Legend; A Christmas Carol from Dickens; The Perfect Holiday from Alcott; Alice in Wonderland from Carroll; Circe's Palace from Hawthorne; The Lady of the Lake from Scott; A Midsummer Night's Dream from Shakespeare and Robin Hood from an old ballad. I enjoyed reading these stories again in simple play form. This is a beautiful little book and a valued addition to my collection of the series.… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
gmillar | Aug 9, 2015 |
Priscilla Thornton - nicknamed "Quilla" as a result of a childhood inability to pronounce her own name - was a Thursfield girl. Not for her the local "freak school" run by Miss Pargetter, which emphasized beauty and art, rather than academics and sport. When Biddy Tomykins - young for the Third Form, and small for her age - was transferred to Thursfield from its rival school, the little "Parge" became something of a target to her new classmates. Quilla, who had encountered Biddy before, couldn't help but like her, despite her elf-like quality and her "Queen B" moniker. But being Biddy's friend - or champion, as need be - created nothing but problems, driving a wedge between Quilla and her closest school-friend, Tamsin, and involving her in all manner of disasters. Would things ever return to normal, or would the coming of Biddy ruin Quilla's school experience forever...?

Evelyn Smith, who published fourteen girls' school-stories from 1922 to 1928, is an author whose work I greatly enjoy, and although Biddy and Quilla doesn't quite equal such titles as Seven Sisters at Queen Anne’s, and its sequels, it was still immensely engaging. Smith really had an understanding of young girls, and the complicated social relations between them, probably owing to the years she spent teaching at a school like Thursfield. From Quilla's conflicted feelings about Biddy, to Tamsin's simultaneous awareness of her own resentment, and inability to control it, Smith demonstrates a sensitive appreciation for the world and experience of the schoolgirl. Highly recommended to all Evelyn Smith fans, or to any readers with an interest in the girls' school-story genre!
… (mehr)
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
AbigailAdams26 | Jul 18, 2013 |

Listen

Dir gefällt vielleicht auch

Nahestehende Autoren

Frank Wiles Illustrator
J. Dewar Mills Illustrator
Frank Varty Illustrator
E. Hiley Illustrator
F.E. Hiley Illustrator
Kate M'Cosh Clarke Contributor
Edouard Laboullave Contributor
Cecilia Sinclair Contributor
Honor C. Appleton Illustrator
Edmondo de Amicus Contributor
F. V. Farmer Contributor
W. H. Barker Contributor
Amy Steedman Contributor
Catherine Sinclair Contributor
George W. Peck Contributor
Arthur Ransome Contributor
Peter Rosegger Contributor
Washington Irving Contributor
Carl Sandburg Contributor
Hugh Lofting Contributor
Sarah Orne Jewett Contributor
Maria Edgeworth Contributor
Padraic Colum Contributor
Lafcadio Hearn Contributor
Lucretia P. Hale Contributor
Zacharias Topelius Contributor
Douglas Hyde Contributor
Rose Fyleman Contributor
L. M. Alcott Contributor
Hans Andersen Contributor
Fred Contributor
Leo Tolstoi Contributor
Mary De Morgan Contributor
Marjorie Wardrop Contributing translator
H. Coller Illustrator

Statistikseite

Werke
42
Auch von
3
Mitglieder
324
Beliebtheit
#73,085
Bewertung
½ 3.6
Rezensionen
20
ISBNs
27

Diagramme & Grafiken