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Alice Curtis (1)

Auteur de A Little Maid of Massachusetts Colony

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Alice Curtis, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

Alice Curtis (1) a été combiné avec Alice Turner Curtis.

4 oeuvres 305 utilisateurs 3 critiques

Œuvres de Alice Curtis

Les œuvres ont été combinées en Alice Turner Curtis.

A Little Maid of Old Philadelphia (1919) 83 exemplaires
Little Maid of Narragansett Bay (1915) 67 exemplaires
A Little Maid of Maryland (1923) 55 exemplaires

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The reader of Alice Turner Cook's Little Maid series - a collection of twenty-five children's novels featuring young girls growing up in colonial and revolutionary America - might be forgiven for thinking that the Revolution was a fairly minor conflict conducted by amiable rivals, rather than a bitter struggle that divided neighbor from neighbor - a war fought by guerrilla-rebels against an occupying force that did not feel itself obligated to observe any of the customary rules of war. The terrible prison ships of Wallabout Bay, where deliberately inhumane conditions caused more American deaths than all the battles of the war combined, make no appearance in A Little Maid of Old New York; nor does the internecine violence between Patriot and Tory neighbor have any place in A Little Maid of Narragansett Bay.

By the same token, readers of A Little Maid of Old Philadelphia might wonder how such notable figures as George Washington, the Marquis de la Fayette, and General Howe found the time to conduct a war, with so many visits from endearing young girls looking for lost dogs, or eager to deliver messages and help the cause. Valley Forge makes an appearance, but don't expect tales of emaciated soldiers munching on candles to survive the winter. There is certainly mention made of hardship, but it is quickly glossed over by a tale of bringing honey to the men...

Time and distance often do soften the harsh realities of history in our collective imagination, but I think the sanitized picture painted in Curtis' books (of which I have now read three) probably owes more to the conventions governing children's literature in the early part of the twentieth century, when these titles first saw publication. The tale of two young Philadelphia girls - Ruth Pennel and Winifred Merill - who take part in plays, go to May-Day parties, and get lost while driving their pony-cart in the country, A Little Maid of Old Philadelphia can tell us more about social expectations of childhood in 1919 than in 1778. Ruth's great deed in warning Lafayette of a British plan to capture him occurs almost at the end of the book, and feels like an afterthought to the "real" story.

Still, this was an entertaining book, that will appeal to those readers with a taste for sentimental children's novels, and an interest in vintage girls' series. Just don't expect real historical fiction...
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Signalé
AbigailAdams26 | Jul 17, 2013 |
Alice Turner Curtis wrote twenty-four of the Little Maid books, each detailing the adventures of a young patriot girl during the time of the American Revolution. A Little Maid of Narragansett Bay is the third of this series, and contains the story of Penelope Balfour, a young farm girl in Rhode Island, whose father is off fighting with the American regiment under Colonel William Barton.

"Smiling Penny," as her older brother Ted sometimes calls her, longs to do something to help the American cause, and she soon has her opportunity... In the meantime, she and young Florence Dickinson, the daughter of wealthy Tories, quarrel and make up; and Penny becomes good friends with Mrs. Godfrey, the minister's wife.

This is a very sedate story: set during a very bloody period of history, it contains no fighting, and the conflicts (such as the resentment against the Tory family, the Dickinsons) seem too easily resolved. Of course, this was published in 1915, and is really more of a sentimental girls' novel that just happens to be set during a war, than it is a piece of realistic historical fiction. Perhaps it was thought that the latter would not be suitable for young girls? However that may be, this was an enjoyable, lighthearted read, although the stereotypical speech of some of the black ("darky") servants was disturbing.
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Signalé
AbigailAdams26 | Jul 3, 2013 |
This is the story of Anne who manages to be a good little girl despite being mistreated by her friends, running away, being held prisoner, going to Boston, capturing a British ship, and finally returning to Provincetown. She makes friends, has adventures, and generally has a wonderful time. The story did come across as a little too contrived for my taste, however.
 
Signalé
t1bclasslibrary | Apr 10, 2012 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
4
Membres
305
Popularité
#77,181
Évaluation
3.2
Critiques
3
ISBN
38
Langues
3

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