Imagen del autor

Annie Fellows Johnston (1863–1931)

Autor de Joel: A Boy of Galilee

60+ Obras 1,092 Miembros 6 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Nota de desambiguación:

(eng) Some sites say the series has 12 titles and others 13.

Series

Obras de Annie Fellows Johnston

Joel: A Boy of Galilee (1895) 165 copias
The Little Colonel (1895) 149 copias
The Three Weavers (1919) 130 copias
The Little Colonel's Hero (1902) 37 copias
Mary Ware in Texas (1935) 25 copias
Mary Ware's Promised Land (1912) 24 copias
The Shirley Temple Treasury (1959) 22 copias
The Giant Scissors (1898) 22 copias
Georgina of the Rainbows (1916) 21 copias
Big Brother (1894) 9 copias
The Jester's Sword (1920) 8 copias
Georgina's Service Stars (1918) 7 copias
The Story of Dago (1900) 5 copias
Cicely and Other Stories (1910) 4 copias
Aunt Liza's Hero (1904) 1 copia
Rosies valg 1 copia
Ole Mammy's Torment (2011) 1 copia
Cicely 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

The Little Colonel [1935 film] (1935) — Original book — 28 copias
Arthurian Literature by Women: An Anthology (1999) — Contribuidor — 19 copias
Victorian Tales for Girls (1947) — Contribuidor — 2 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1863-05-15
Fecha de fallecimiento
1931-11-05
Lugar de sepultura
Pewee Valley, Kentucky, USA
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Evansville, Indiana, USA
Lugar de fallecimiento
Pewee Valley, Kentucky, USA
Lugares de residencia
Indiana, USA
Kentucky, USA
Arizona, USA
California, USA
Texas, USA
Educación
University of Iowa
Ocupaciones
teacher
private secretary
Relaciones
Bacon, Albion Fellows (sibling)
Biografía breve
Born Annie Julia Fellows, Annie grew up with her mother, brother Erwin and two sisters, Lura & Albion, on a farm in McCutchanville, Indiana, near Evansville. Her father, Albion, a Methodist minister, died when she was only two, but left his influences through his theological books. Annie began writing already as a girl, producing poems and stories imitating those she read in Godsey's Lady's Book, Youth's Companion and St. Nicholas. She was also known to have read every book in her Sunday school library. She attended district school, and even taught a year when she was 17. Her mother was a firm believer in education for women.
Annie attended the University of Iowa for one year (1881-82), then returned to Evansville to teach for three years, and later to work as a private secretary. She traveled for several months through New England and Europe, staying with cousins along the way. The influence of these trips would be seen later in many of her her works. When she returned, she married William L. Johnston (a cousin and a widower with three young children.) He encouraged her to write, and she began contributing stories to periodicals. William died in 1892, leaving Annie a widow with his children to support (she never had any of her own). It was at that time that Annie began her career as a writer. Annie Fellows Johnston received tremendous fame and popularity around the turn of the 20th century as an author of books for children. She is best known for her thirteen book series beginning with The Little Colonel, although she wrote over forty books in all as well as contributed occasional stories to periodicals such as the Youth's Companion.
The illustration in the The Sunday Herald Post, Louisville, Kentucky, December 23, 1928, shows Annie Fellows Johnston around 1928 with the then grown-up Hattie Cochran, the real-life Little Colonel. Most of the characters in Mrs. Johnstons' semi-biographical works were based on actual people, places and experiences. For the Little Colonel Series, Johnston fictionalized Pewee Valley, Kentucky, just outside Louisville, as Lloydsborough Valley.
Aviso de desambiguación
Some sites say the series has 12 titles and others 13.

Miembros

Reseñas

Great book. I got it from Polly. Strange little philosophical book similar to Henry Van Dyke's The Mansion and The Other Wise Man. I wish they still published books like this.
 
Denunciada
CodyMaxwellBooks | Oct 30, 2021 |
I don't understand why people don't like this book.
Yes the Grandfather is disdainful of all poor people, but I wouldn't say he thought any less of African American's.
If you take offense at the word nigga, I'm sorry to hear that you are rewriting history and I don't want to have much to do with you.
I read a charming tale of forgiveness and healing.
 
Denunciada
Wanda-Gambling | 3 reseñas más. | May 9, 2020 |
Racist, twee, and saccharin-sticky. From the opening scene with the "trawbewwies" right up to the end it was torture of the most sentimental sort. I couldn't stop, it was such a twain weck!
 
Denunciada
satyridae | 3 reseñas más. | Apr 5, 2013 |
Originally published in 1895, The Little Colonel was the first of an extended series of children's novels that chronicle the adventures of young Lloyd Sherman - nicknamed "the Little Colonel" because her fiery temperament and stubborn disposition call to mind similar qualities in her estranged grandfather, a former colonel in the Confederate army - and her friends. In this opening volume of the series, the five-year-old Little Colonel meets her grandfather for the first time, and, despite the tensions existing between him and her parents - Colonel Lloyd, having lost his only son, Tom, as well as his arm, in the recent Civil War, had no use for Yankees, and had disowned his only daughter Elizabeth (Lloyd's mother), when she married Jack Sherman of New York - forms a bond of deep affection with him. Will the Little Colonel's love be enough to conquer his pride, however, and reconcile him to his daughter and son-in-law...?

This being a sentimental novel of the late nineteenth/early twentieth centuries, there is never much doubt as to the conclusion of the tale, but the process by which that conclusion is reached is not without its charm. Colonel Lloyd is (with a few exceptions) an engaging character despite his flaws, and the Little Colonel is endearing. I did wonder a bit at the author's decision to make her speech so decidedly southern, when (according to the story) she had been raised in New York, and had only come to Lloydsborough some short time before the opening of the story, but leaving that issue aside, her characterization - her penchant for story-telling (and evident fondness for The Three Billy Goats Gruff), her knack for making friends with all and sundry, her passionate temper - was well done. The conclusion itself, while easy enough to predict, is a satisfying affirmation of family love and reconciliation, as well as an oblique portrait of rapprochement between North and South, so recently divided by that bitterest of struggles, the American Civil War.

Read a certain way, The Little Colonel is really a most engaging book, making it easy to see why it (not to mention its many sequels) was so very popular in the early years of the twentieth century. There was even a Shirley Temple film made from it, in 1935. Of course, that "certain way" of reading involves turning a blind eye to the thoroughly racist depictions of all the black characters, who are happily subservient, stupidly superstitious (as witnessed by Mom Beck's conviction that Papa Jack is doomed to die, because of the "signs" she has seen), and speak in the sort of broken dialect often reserved for them in children's stories of the period. It also requires ignoring the frequent occurrence of such racial epithets as "pickaninnies," "darkies," and (to a lesser extent) "n*ggers" in the text.

That such is the way some would like to read the book can be seen by their emphatically (and defensively) glowing reviews, in which they insist either that the book is not racist, or that its racism cannot be held against it, because it was "of the times." I am amused to note that www.littlecolonel.com, a most informative website devoted to Johnston's books, claims that her work has fallen out of favor because contemporary readers don't value "romantic and sentimental wholesomeness" any more, but makes no mention of this other, far more significant objection that said readers might have, or that Johnston's fall from popularity might reflect the (thankfully!) changing racial dynamics of American society.

What then is the contemporary reader, the one who does value the "romantic and sentimental" (yes, yes, I admit it!), but who loathes racism, to do? Should books like The Little Colonel still be read, and by whom? As someone with an interest in the history of American children's books, as well as (more recently) the school-story genre, this is a title I've been meaning to pick up. After all, the Little Colonel series was once immensely popular, and it also includes an example of the school story, in The Little Colonel at Boarding-School. It documents, not necessarily a moment in American history, but a perception of that moment. Or put another way, it helped to create the perception of that moment, and seems to have been part of a new kind of romanticism about the south. All factors that give it great interest for me, as someone with a more academic interest in children's literature, and its social significance. It is also, despite its objectionable content, quite readable (hence the three stars, rather than two, although I'm still debating that point).

I think that this is a book I would recommend to older readers who are interested in the history of American children's literature, in vintage American children's series, or in the depiction of the post Civil War South (and specifically, Kentucky) in said literature and series. I don't know that I would recommend it to young readers, and am thankful that I didn't encounter it as a young person myself. Still, I'm glad to have read it at this point, as I do find it utterly fascinating, and I think I will probably read further in the series.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
AbigailAdams26 | 3 reseñas más. | Mar 31, 2013 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
60
También por
3
Miembros
1,092
Popularidad
#23,528
Valoración
½ 3.8
Reseñas
6
ISBNs
259
Idiomas
4

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