Picture of author.

Alice Hegan Rice (1870–1942)

Author of Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch

20+ Works 647 Members 10 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Alice Hegan Rice (1870-1942) was born in Shelbyville, Kentucky and grew up in Louisville
Image credit: By National Book League (Great Britain) - Page 419 of Book News, volume 20, number 240, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4454126

Series

Works by Alice Hegan Rice

Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch (1901) 479 copies, 8 reviews
Lovey Mary (1903) 61 copies, 1 review
Sandy (2013) 21 copies
Mr. Opp (1985) 19 copies
The Honorable Percival (2007) 6 copies
Calvary Alley (1918) 5 copies
The inky way 4 copies
Quin (2007) 4 copies, 1 review
Mr. Pete & Co. 3 copies
Captain June (1907) 3 copies
Happiness Road (1942) 3 copies
Our Ernie (1929) 2 copies

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Reviews

12 reviews
Quinby Graham is recuperating from injuries sustained during the Great War (World War I to us, of course) at a hospital in Kentucky (it's Louisville, though it's never actually specified). While on the path to recovery, he meets Eleanor Bartlett, and instantly falls head over heels in love with her. He makes her the guiding light of all his future aspirations. She's socially a bit above him, so he sets out to win over her entire family and also better himself in hopes of winning her love.

I show more liked a lot of things in this book, but the love story wasn't one of them. Eleanor's main qualities seem to be spunkiness, naivete, and beauty... a bit of a thin basis for undying love. IMO. However... Quinby himself I liked. He pitches in and makes himself indispensable to her prickly but sad aunts and ruler-of-the-roost grandmother. He is so straightforward and undisguised that he disarms them all. And also helps several in the family to find the things that they've really wanted to do all along but have been too scared to attempt, whether it's getting married, buying a farm, or nursing at a hospital. He "handles" everyone, but with such honest good nature no one can mind.

Also, the writing was pretty good and there were several fantastic passages that I'll be sharing from my Kindle highlights. I didn't completely love the book, but it did have its pleasant surprises.
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Not a good choice for children, written in a verbose Victorian style and packed with ignorant speech for the poor whites and "coloreds" that would make for difficult reading for a child. Theme is the charm the poor can gain by making peace with their suffering and death. Saccharine. Dreadful. Millions of better books for a child.
This book was written to be read to a child and it achieves that objective very, very well. The book does not varnish over the hardships of poverty, yet it does not turn dark because it is a child's book. I was surprised that Alice Rice allowed a key character to die so early in the book, but that brought the realism of the despair of the family to the young listeners. The author showed brilliant strokes of imagination: geographical names for children, the characteristics of the neighbors, show more the actions of the family. Yes, the book does end on a rosy note, but that's how a child's book should end.

I gave 3 1/2 stars since this is a good book, one that I would recommend but not one that I would read again any time soon.
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½
There are a couple of outdated remarks that might offend a modern reader; but otherwise the book is full of goodness. Mrs. Wiggs is wise and loving.

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Statistics

Works
20
Also by
2
Members
647
Popularity
#39,005
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
10
ISBNs
142
Favorited
2

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