The Fairy Doll

by Rumer Godden

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Fairy Doll has always been at the top of the Christmas tree, brilliant in her white beaded dress and little silver shoes (which Elizabeth is sure were sewn by fairy mice).Elizabeth is the smallest in the family. She is always getting into trouble and her brothers and sisters are forever leaving her out and ordering her around. She's convinced she's useless. Then Great-Grandma gives Fairy Doll to Elizabeth - and it isn't even Christmas! From then on Elizabeth keeps hearing a little 'Ting!' show more which seems to tell her what to do. Suddenly everything starts going right instead of wrong. Could Fairy Doll be magical? show less

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2 reviews
A perfect Christmas gift. ?áA little too sweet for modern children the rest of the year, but the feelings of the youngest of a large and lively family are authentically captured by Godden's musical prose and (at least in the edition I read) the art of Caldecott winner Adrienne Adams. ?áIt certainly is a pity the teacher calls Elizabeth 'stupid' and the child is hushed when she asks 'Where is Canada?' upon learning that's Great-Grandmother's home. ?áBut all is well in the end, of course. ?á

I would have loved this when I was a child just for the descriptions of all the crafting and collecting Elizabeth does to make a home for the doll. ?áNever mind that I'm the oldest and so would not likely have empathized then with show more Elizabeth's plight. ?á*Perhaps* I would have been more supportive or kinder to my younger brothers, though. ?áBest of all, the book is short enough for a family to read it aloud together, perhaps after all the presents have been opened and the feast digested, in the evening of Christmas Day. show less
A fairy doll tops a tree for a family where the youngest girl is struggling in her achievement. When great-grandmother declares that Elizabeth needs her own fairy, the doll becomes hers. With the power of the fairy doll, the girl is able to achieve. What happens when the fairy doll goes missing? You'll have to read to find out, because I'm not telling! There are some aspects to this story that are dated, such as lighting candles on the tree and having a cedar chest. It's probably not a story that modern children would enjoy, but I found it enjoyable.
½

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Author Information

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88+ Works 15,219 Members
Margaret Rumer Godden was born Dec. 10, 1907, in Sussex, England. She was nine months old when her family moved to India, where her father ran a shipping line. She returned to London at age 20 to learn how to teach dance to children, and opened a school back in India. Returning to England while she was pregnant, she wrote her first book, "Chinese show more Puzzle," published in 1936. Her marriage to a stockbroker, Laurence Sinclair Foster, ended in 1941, leaving her penniless. In an effort to pay off her former husband's debts, Godden moved her family into a mountain cottage where she ran a school, made herbal teas for sale, and wrote books. Another novel of India, "The River," published in 1949, was one of her most acclaimed books and was made into a film by Jean Renoir in 1951. She returned to England to stay in 1945. Rumer Godden was the author of more than 60 books, including novels, short story collections, poetry, plays and non-fiction. She published her 21st novel, "Cromartie vs. the God Shiva," in 1997. Rumer Godden died a year later on November 8, 1998, in Thornhill, Scotland, at the age of 90. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Fairy Doll
Original publication date
1956
People/Characters
Elizabeth; Godfrey; Christabel; Josie; mother; father (show all 8); Great-Grandmother; Fairy Doll
Dedication
For Rose Mary because, once upon a time, I am afraid we treated her as Christabel, Godfrey and Josie treated Elizabeth before she had the fairy doll.
First words
Nobody knew where she came from.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)She loves the baby doll, but every time she goes up and down the stairs she stops on the landing and puts her hand on the cedar chest; every time she does it - it may be her imagination - from inside comes a faint glass "ting" that is like a Christmas bell.

Classifications

Genres
Children's Books, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PZ8 .G543 .FLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
122
Popularity
265,986
Reviews
2
Rating
(4.04)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
11
ASINs
5