Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm

by Kate Douglas Wiggin
List(s):"Carp 500"
Category: "Fiction - Chapter Books"
Pages:252
Year of Publication:1903
Date Read:04/09/1995
Notes:The irrepressible 10-year-old Rebecca Rowena Randall burst into the world of children's book characters (and her new life in Maine) in 1903 when storybook girls were gentle and proper. A “bird of a very different feather,” she had “a small, plain face illuminated by a pair of eyes carrying such messages, such suggestions, such hints of sleeping power and insight, that one never tired of looking into their shining depths ...” Soon enough, she wins over her prim Aunt Miranda, the whole town, and thousands of readers everywhere with her energetic, indomitable spirit.

COMMENTS — Author Jack London wrote Kate Douglas Wiggin a letter about her classic Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm from the headquarters of the First Japanese Army in Manchuria in 1904: “May I thank you for Rebecca? ... I would have quested the wide world over to make her mine, only I was born too long ago and she was born but yesterday ... Why could she not have been my daughter? Why couldn't it have been I who bought the three hundred cakes of soap? Why, O, why?” Mark Twain called Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm “beautiful and warm and satisfying.”
My Rating: 8

Reviews for Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm

Review - Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm

I liked it. I was surprised that I liked it, since it was written for girls, about a girl and by a girl. But Rebecca was a likeable girl, and it was written when readers were assumed to be intelligent. The story is told with a sense of humor and not too much girlish mushiness.
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