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Puffin Classics The Railway Children
 
 

Puffin Classics The Railway Children [Paperback]

Edith Nesbit , J Wilson

Price: CDN$ 5.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Puffin UK (Jun 22 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0141321601
  • ISBN-13: 978-0141321608
  • Product Dimensions: 17.8 x 13 x 2.3 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 240 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #77,474 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

When Father is taken away unexpectedly, Roberta, Peter, Phyllis and their mother have to leave their comfortable life in London to go and live in a small cottage in the country. The children seek solace in the nearby railway station, and make friends with Perks the Porter and the Station Master himself. Each day, Roberta, Peter and Phyllis run down the field to the railway track and wave at the passing London train, sending their love to Father. Little do they know that the kindly old gentleman passenger who waves back holds the key to their father's disappearance. This is one of the best-loved classics of all time, with a wonderful introduction by Jacqueline Wilson.

About the Author

Edith Nesbit was a mischievous child who grew up into an unconventional adult. With her husband, Hubert Bland, she was one of the founder members of the socialist Fabian Society; their household became a centre of the socialist and literary circles of the times. E. Nesbit turned late to children's writing. Her first children's book, The Treasure Seekers, was published in 1899 to great acclaim. Other books featuring the Bastable children followed, and a series of magical fantasy books, including Five Children and It also became very popular. The Railway Children was first published monthly in the London Magazine in 1905, and published as a book in 1906, which has been in print ever since.

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

5.0 out of 5 stars E. Nesbit is always magic, Mar 31 2012
By Tracey - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Puffin Classics The Railway Children (Paperback)
Again E. Nesbit shows herself expert at showing-not-telling, and at writing for anyone and everyone. With the story told from the point of view of the children, and aimed at children, all anyone under a certain height level is going to understand is that the father of the family goes away one night and does not come back, and the mother tells the three that he is away on business - and everything changes. Mother is upset or sad all the time, even when pretending otherwise. The children are made to understand that they are now poor - for a while. And almost overnight they pick up and leave their home - taking all the furniture the children deem "ugly" and Mother deems "useful", but few of their pretty things - and move out to a cottage in the country and Mother begins writing most of the day and far into the night. And Father does not come back.

I can't think how this story could be told more poignantly than as it is, obliquely through the children's eyes. Peter and Roberta (Bobbie) and Phyllis are, of course, bright children, and good ones, well brought up and attentive and conscientious - but they are wrapped in the happy oblivion of what seems to have been an upper middle class upbringing, wanting for no essential and few non-essentials, a world in which it is utterly and in all other ways inconceivable that anyone could ever dream their father did anything wrong. As it happens, of course, they are correct, but even had their father been in truth Jack the Ripper they would have been difficult to convince. They are essentially self-involved, viewing the world only as it affects them; for Peter and Phyllis it is enough that their mother tells them their father is away on business and they mustn't worry. They are upset when she is upset, but otherwise they are content and involved in their own lives. Bobbie is more attentive, more outwardly focused, and seems to step away from her childhood with this book.

Mother is, in this story, utterly brilliant - and I don't think that's just because the point of view is thoroughly sympathetic. She does a tremendous job of protecting her children - whisking them away from their old environment before they can hear a whisper of what has really happened to their father.

And of course the children are brilliant too. Roberta especially is rather magnificent. I love the narrator's frank statement that she hopes the reader does not mind her paying particular attention to Bobbie, but she has become rather a favorite. And I also love the equally frank assessment of her tendency to a) interfere or b) help lame dogs over stiles or c) help others, depending on who you ask - she can't help herself from making every effort to do something, and feels things very deeply, and this does not always make for easy relations with others.

The realism of E. Nesbit's writing is a bit dinged by the heroic role of the children during the summer of the story. Not to spoil things, but the events the three of them become involved in might, individually, be acceptable; all together it's a little bit ridiculous. But for the original target audience it would be so much fun. For me, a good bit older than the target? Also fun - and I admit to choking up at the climax. Oh, and Karen Savage, the narrator of the Librivox recording? Absolutely terrific.
 Go to Amazon.com to see the review  5.0 out of 5 stars 

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