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Understood Betsy by Dorothy Canfield Fisher
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Understood Betsy

by Dorothy Canfield Fisher

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59597,925 (4.22)20
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Henry Holt and Co. (BYR) (1999), Hardcover, 240 pages

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If I could give it more than five stars, I would. Just about my favorite children's book of all times and the strange thing is I didn't read it until I was in my forties. Love it, love, love it. ( )
  beanyncecil | Aug 13, 2009 |
A very cute children's book about facing your fears and overcoming them. ( )
  Katya0133 | Jul 14, 2009 |
This is a great family read aloud. ( )
  alyson | Jul 2, 2009 |
This is a great family read aloud. ( )
  alyson | Jul 2, 2009 |
A sweet story of an odd little girl who everyone thinks they understand, but don't. What makes it cute is that it's set back in the late 1900s. ( )
  gaialover2 | Dec 17, 2008 |
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When this story begins, Elizabeth Ann, who is the heroine of it, was a little girl of nine, who lived with her great-aunt Harriet in a medium-sized city in a medium-sized state in the middle of this country; and that's all you need to know about the place, for it's not the important thing in the story; and anyhow you know all about it because it was probably very much like the place you live in yourself.
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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0440700302, Paperback)

Anyone who fondly remembers how the fresh air of the moors puts a blush in the cheeks of sallow young Mary in The Secret Garden will love Dorothy Canfield Fisher's Understood Betsy just as much. First published in 1916, this engaging classic tells the tale of a thin, pale 9-year-old orphan named Elizabeth Ann who is whisked away from her city home and relocated to a Vermont farm where her cousins, the "dreaded Putneys," live. The Putneys are not as bad as her doting, high-strung Aunt Frances warns, however, and Elizabeth, who had been nurtured by her aunt like an overwatered sapling--positively blooms under their breezy, earthy care.

Elizabeth Ann's first victories are small ones--taking the reins from Uncle Harry, doing her own hair, making her own breakfast--but children will revel in the awakening independence and growing self-confidence of a girl who learns to think for herself... and even laugh. Along the way, "citified" readers of all ages will get a glimpse into the lives of people who are truly connected to the world around them--making butter ("We always bought ours," says Elizabeth Ann), experiencing the "rapt wonder that people in the past were really people," and understanding the difference between failing in school and failing at life. Fisher is a wise, personable storyteller, steeped in the Montessori principles of learning for its own sake, the value of process, and the importance of "indirect support" in child rearing. She also captures the tempestuous emotional life of a child as few authors can, crafting a story that children will find deeply satisfying. And in the end, readers will have grown as fond of the happier, stronger "Betsy" as the gentle, unassuming Putneys have.

Loving care was dolloped on this 1999 reissue of an old favorite--with sweet new pencil illustrations by Kimberly Bulcken Root, and an introduction and afterword by Eden Ross Lipson that offer a historical context for the book and its author. (Ages 8 to 12) --Karin Snelson

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:10 -0400)

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