4 Stars
Oh, but it’s such a classic! To all of you who are protesting, too bad. This is the book of the week, as it is a classic, and I have not been able to visit my lovely local library or the book store to get anything I really, really, super badly wanted to read.
I like this book anyway. It has a beautiful story, and even if I like A Little Princess better, this one remains close to my heart as one of those children’s novels that you remember for years to come.
What I love about it is the era; the writing is so classic as is the story. An orphan. A mysterious and depressed uncle. A strange secret boy. A forbidden garden. Honestly, it’s something that you can’t forget, and it has that pull to it that makes it so unique.
What I did not like was not due to anything but my age. It is written for children, so reading it again now made it a simple and light read. that’s okay.
Overall, I think that this is a great novel for any children to read, and if you have never read it, I think now would be the time to at least attempt this novel. It is interwoven into our history, and is as classic as any Jane Austen or Leo Tolstoy. It’s just for a younger audience.
“Mistress Mary, quite contrary, how does your garden grow? With silver bells, and cockle shells and marigolds all in a row.”
Mary Lennox is a sullen, spoiled child raised in India by her rich and fabulous parents. Her world is rocked though, when a disease rampages through the household, and Mary is suddenly an orphan.
She is sent away to London, then to her uncle’s house out on the cold, rainy moor. The house used to be luxurious, but all the rooms are locked, the household staff quiet, and the gardens tended by a old and cranky gardener. And Mistress Mary has nothing to do.
Slowly though, she starts to learn of the secrets of the house, what it means to grow up, and how much nicer people look when they smile.

Author: Frances Hodgson Burnett
Published: August 1st 1999 by Aladdin (first published 1909)
Page Count: 416
ISBN: 0689831412 (isbn13: 9780689831416)