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NEW CHRONICLES OF REBECCA
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By KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN
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“Rebecca is the same likable and lovable girl as ever.... It is her good-nature and geniality, her almost uninterrupted happiness, that gives her an unlimited attractiveness. She is the embodiment of actual girlhood. She is as alive as any character can be within the imaginative pages of fiction.”
Boston Transcript.
“One cannot avoid a shrewd suspicion that some of the episodes are autobiographical, but, whether founded on fact or imagined, they make delightful reading, and worthily maintain the reputation of a writer who has done for the present generation of American and English readers much that Miss Alcott did for its predecessor.”
Spectator, London.
“Rebecca belongs to us and to our century as did Little Nell to the days of Dickens. She is like a May morning, or a bright June day, or an April promise. She has her smiles and her tears, her little hopes and fears and longings and ambitions—but after all is said—she is just Rebecca.”
Portland Daily Press.
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With eight illustrations byF. C. Yohn
12mo, $1.25
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HOUGHTONMIFFLINCOMPANYemblem Tout Rien Ou RienBOSTONANDNEW YORK
Transcriber’s Notes:Obvious punctuation errors repaired. Varied hyphenation was retained.Page 279, “foolishnes” changed to “foolishness” (time in foolishness)
Transcriber’s Notes:
Obvious punctuation errors repaired. Varied hyphenation was retained.
Page 279, “foolishnes” changed to “foolishness” (time in foolishness)