REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM, IN LOVELY ORIGINAL PICTORIAL CLOTH
WIGGIN, Kate Douglas. Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin, 1903. Octavo, original pictorial green cloth.
First edition, fourth printing, of this classic American children's novel, in lovely original pictorial cloth.
"When Kate Douglas Wiggin wrote Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1903) over 90 years ago, she created a child who stepped into that elite group of book characters whose names are familiar to each new generation of readers" (Silvey, 680). "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1902) came from poverty to a home where there was another kind of poverty, poor in the grace of living and in understanding of a child. The success in the evolution of such a theme depends wholly on the character portrayal of the child and can become a maudlin interpretation of the 'little child shall lead them' idea. The great thing about Kate Douglas Wiggin's book is that in it a notable child character is born, a life-full and unforgettable personality, an individual with a strong sense of herself as an individual. Vivid, generous, eager, with tremendous capacity for joy and sorrow and sympathy, timeless in her appeal, she dominates the book. From the time she arrives in Riverboro, a small person who slid around on the leather cushion of the stage coach, wearing a funny little straw hat and carrying a pink sunshade, the 'dearest thing in life' to her, to the close of the book, she is more real than many a person in actual life" (Meigs, et al., 380). First edition, fourth printing, with "Don't turn in at the side;" at page 325, line 9 and "in the October sun" at page 327, line 13; in binding B with spine imprint in letters 1/8" high (BAL 22632). Without rare dust jacket. BAL 22632. Contemporary owner gift signatures.
A beautiful nearly fine copy.