Charlotte Maria Tucker (1821–1893)
Author of The Giant Killer
About the Author
Image credit: Image from A lady of England; the life and letters of Charlotte Maria Tucker (1895) by Agnes Giberne
Series
Works by Charlotte Maria Tucker
Claudia : a tale 3 copies
Young Pilgrim, c2 2 copies
The Silver Casket 2 copies
Young Pilgrim 2 copies
The crown of success 2 copies
The Claremont Tales 2 copies
The cord of life : a tale 2 copies
The silver casket, or, The world and its wiles / by A.L.O.E. [pseud.] ... 1879 [Leather Bound] 1 copy
The Brother's Return 1 copy
Stories of the Wars of the Jews: From the Babylonish Captivity, to the Destruction of Jerusalem 1 copy
True Heroism 1 copy
Living Jewels: Diversities of Christian Character Suggested by Precious Stones, with Biographical Examples, by A.L.O.E. (2010) 1 copy
Sheer Off 1 copy
The Silver Keys 1 copy
The French Fugitive 1 copy
The forlorn hope, by A.L.O.E 1 copy
A Braid of Cords 1 copy
Little Bullets From Batala 1 copy
Daybreak in Britain 1 copy
Ben Stone 1 copy
An Eden in England. A tale 1 copy
Martin Laver 1 copy
Palace of Deceit 1 copy
Gain and Loss 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Tucker, Charlotte Maria
- Other names
- A. L. O. E.
A Lady of England - Birthdate
- 1821-05-08
- Date of death
- 1893-12-02
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- novelist
missionary
children's book author
poet
short story writer - Short biography
- Charlotte Maria Tucker was a daughter of Henry St. George Tucker, an author and financier who served as chairman of the British East India Company, and his wife Jane Boswell. She was raised in London and as a child wrote poems and plays to amuse her family. Her first book The Claremont Tales was published in 1852. She went on to become a prolific and popular novelist and writer of short stories, tracts, and poems for children and adults -- she reportedly produced more than 150 books during the latter half of the 19th century. Many of her works are set in India, where she went to live in 1875 at the age of 54, having first taught herself Hindustani. There she worked as a volunteer missionary and taught in a boys' school. She donated most of the profits of her books to charities and religious missions. Her pen name A.L.O.E. stands for "a lady of England."
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Friern Barnet, Middlesex, England, UK
- Places of residence
- Friern Barnet, Barnet, London, England, UK
London, England, UK
Batala, India
Amritsar, India - Place of death
- Amritsar, India
- Burial location
- India
- Map Location
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
I wasn’t sure about this book at first. It seemed too preachy and preachiness in fiction is one of my pet hates. But I changed my attitude when I realised that the author’s purpose was to give a sermon in story style. So I settled in to listen and found that not only did I learn from her simple storytelling style, but I became engaged with the story and characters as well.
I deleted this from my Kindle part of the way through. I am not sure what they were aiming for, but if I wanted something that smelled of Christianity, I would have stayed Catholic instead of becoming Jewish.
This was a very long story that I am not entirely sure I could even categorize as Jewish. OK, a few characters were "Hebrew" but given the connections to the New Testament, I have to ask, did a Messianic Jew write this? It was long and a bit painful, I am so glad I am finally finished show more with it to be honest.
The only reason I am labeling this as being in my Jewish library is because otherwise when I do a search, I will forget that this is more Christian than Jewish. show less
This was a very long story that I am not entirely sure I could even categorize as Jewish. OK, a few characters were "Hebrew" but given the connections to the New Testament, I have to ask, did a Messianic Jew write this? It was long and a bit painful, I am so glad I am finally finished show more with it to be honest.
The only reason I am labeling this as being in my Jewish library is because otherwise when I do a search, I will forget that this is more Christian than Jewish. show less
A family from the city inherit a country estate and make the move to become gentlemen farmers. The housekeeper informs them that the room previously occupied by their deceased relative is haunted. There is a mystery slowly building and gradually solved. Family dynamics and individual personalities are well drawn. An uncle does his best to inculcate moral teachings into each visit with the three children.
Didactic fiction from the 1800s which I very much enjoyed. (3.2 stars)
Didactic fiction from the 1800s which I very much enjoyed. (3.2 stars)
The book is a sequel to two others, "Ned Franks" and "Sheer Off." A.L.O.E. wrote, principally for children, to save souls and to illuminate Christian living. Preachy? Yes. Conventional? Absolutely. But the reader is drawn into the lives of these common folks and is, perhaps, a little wiser for having done so.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 118
- Members
- 1,087
- Popularity
- #23,625
- Rating
- 3.3
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 83











