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An Old-Fashioned Girl (Puffin Classics)
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$ 4.73
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| Retail Value |
$ 5.99 |
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$ 1.26 (21%) |
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| Item Number |
71552 |
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Item Description... Polly Milton never questions the way she is - until she goes to visit her cousins in the city. Her cousin Fanny looks too glamorous to be Polly's age, and wouldn't be caught dead playing in the snow. Will Polly ever learn to be like the other girls? And does she even want to? Sometimes being old-fashioned is right in style. A timeless story by the author of Little Women.
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Item Specifications...
Pages 360
Dimensions: Length: 7.7" Width: 5.1" Height: 1" Weight: 0.62 lbs.
Binding Softcover
Release Date Oct 1, 2003
Publisher HOMESCHOOL BARGAIN BOOKS #1456
ISBN 0140374493 EAN 9780140374490
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Availability 21 units. Availability accurate as of Feb 08, 2012 08:15.
Usually ships within one to two business days from Johnson City, TN.
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Reviews - What do our customers think?
 | An Old Fashioned (and really good) Story! Jul 22, 2006 |
| This book started off a bit slow, but if you read more than a page or two at a time, I think you will like it. This story is about a girl from the country who goes to visit her cousins in New York. Polly's cousin, Fanny, and her friends find Polly "coutrified" and "old fashioned". Everyone falls in love with her because of her quiet manner along with the fact that she dresses and acts her age. Although their are multiple hardships along the way, you couldn't have wanted the book to end any other way. I recomend that you don't read the book until you are at least 11 or 12 because some of the wording is odd because it was writtedn so long ago. Happy Reading! | | |  | Alas for Flo Dec 7, 2005 |
| Alas. In my opinion, both "An Old-Fashioned Girl" and "Eight Cousins" audio versions would benefit by having a much younger narrator. Despite her long and illustrious career in audio, Flo Gibson is now too old to bring these novels to life. They are books about young girls, and they are obviously being read by a grandmother. Rather than illustrating the timeless quality of these fine books, an elderly reader makes the books simply sound old and out-of-date. What were the publishers thinking?---CaroJ11 | | |  | Simple Good Clean fun Aug 10, 2005 |
Do you ever feel like you are tied up in our times? Worrying too much about cell phones, fashions, and the latest whatevers? This book can set you straight. It gives you a peace of mind and fills you with simple pleasures.
The stories main character, Polly, we meet at the age of 14. She has come to stay with rich friends for a while. THey do everything so differently from she. The family has two daughters. One that is two years older than Polly called Fan, who cares for fashion, balls, and beaus. The author daughter is six and she is fixed onoo having her own way about everything. THe young man in the family Tom is a trouble maker, who no matter how hard he tries can't seem to stay out of trouble very long.
Polly is a gentle, kind, loving, caring, selfless, practical, and sensible girl. SHe becomes a great service to this family, touching each of them in a special way. She moves in the same town six years later and gives piano lessons. The family needs her more than ever and she helps them all in the end. This book has heart, romance, and realness to it that we can all relate to, rich or poor, young or old. It will make you feel warm fuzzies. Read on a rainy day underneath a flanel blanket! | | |  | A Good Read Aug 5, 2005 |
| An Old Fashioned Girl begins with a teenage girl, Polly who visits her cousins in the city. There, she realises that they are exactly the opposite of the old fashioned girl that she is, and this causes some distress on both sides. Being a modern woman, I expected that this book would be a wonderful read but the initial chapters where Polly was a teenager were hard to take in. Alcott created what she felt to be the "perfect" teenage model in Polly, but I found myself wishing that this "perfect teenage model" would loosen up a bit and do something for herself instead of serving everybody else, which was the "proper thing to do." Ironically, Alcott herself wrote in the book "excessive virtue doesn't last long ...except with little prigs in the goody storybooks." She should have taken herself more seriously because her main character came very close to becoming exactly that! Compared to other classics like Tom Sawyer, The Secret Garden and The Railway Children, the teenagers in the book were very unrealistic, I dare say even for that time. Alcott wrote too much of what she wanted children or teenagers to be, opposed what they actually were, which can get exasperating. However, that is less than half the book, which follows into young adulthood. In here the characters become more realistic, and Polly begins to be truly affected by her poverty and to long to be different. To avoid spoilers, it morphed from an exasperating read into a very good read. Overall, the valuable lessons in the book make it good addition to any collection, especially for children. | | |  | A Wonderful Classic Novel Jul 9, 2005 |
I own a copy of the book that was published in 1911 and as an eighteen year old girl, I still find it very enjoyable to read over and over again. I do not think the book is unrealistic because I think children do grow up too fast today, and a sixteen year old really truely is a little girl. As I look back upon my childhood now, I really do realize what a child I was.
The book really reflects upon high society life as it was (and pretty much still is) in those times. Rich people seem to always look down upon the poor and think that they deserve to be there while they sit in their finery and only think of themselves. Until a girl like Polly comes along to show them that their life is full of just meaningless possessions that do not love them back. Life is really about loving the people around you.
I think I will continue to enjoy this book over and over again, and I hope that other girls get to read it, because I'm tired of seeing little girls grow up way too fast. I like old fashioned things. | | | Write your own review about An Old-Fashioned Girl (Puffin Classics)
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