Mention Books In Favor Of Rainbow Valley (Anne of Green Gables #7)

Original Title: Rainbow Valley
ISBN: 0553269216 (ISBN13: 9780553269215)
Edition Language: English
Series: Anne of Green Gables #7
Characters: Anne Shirley
Setting: Prince Edward Island(Canada)
Books Free Download Rainbow Valley (Anne of Green Gables #7)
Rainbow Valley (Anne of Green Gables #7) Paperback | Pages: 256 pages
Rating: 4.02 | 36311 Users | 1134 Reviews

Point Based On Books Rainbow Valley (Anne of Green Gables #7)

Title:Rainbow Valley (Anne of Green Gables #7)
Author:L.M. Montgomery
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Collector's Edition
Pages:Pages: 256 pages
Published:July 1st 1985 by Starfire (first published 1919)
Categories:Classics. Fiction. Young Adult. Historical. Historical Fiction. Childrens. Cultural. Canada

Relation Supposing Books Rainbow Valley (Anne of Green Gables #7)

Anne Shirley is grown up, has married her beloved Gilbert and now is the mother of six mischievous children.

These boys and girls discover a special place all their own, but they never dream  of what will happen when the strangest family  moves into an old nearby mansion. The Meredith clan is  two boys and two girls, with minister father but  no mother -- and a runaway girl named Mary Vance. Soon the Meredith kids join Anne's children in their private hideout to carry out their plans to save Mary from the orphanage, to help the lonely minister find happiness, and to keep a pet rooster from the soup pot. There's always an adventure brewing in the sun-dappled world of Rainbow Valley.

Rating Based On Books Rainbow Valley (Anne of Green Gables #7)
Ratings: 4.02 From 36311 Users | 1134 Reviews

Judgment Based On Books Rainbow Valley (Anne of Green Gables #7)
4 stars.Rainbow Valley was a sweet little installment in the Anne series that was mainly focuses on the kids. It honestly felt like a bit of a spin off because of how much it focused on the Meridith kids, while Anne and family were practictally side characters. Still, I did enjoy it very much even if the shadow of the impending Great War did creep in here and there and make me sad. (Darn that Pied Piper metaphor that kept making me want to cry.)This story was so character driven I think the best

Anne Blythe ("Mrs. Dr. dear") lives at Ingleside with a brood of children. Across the way is the manse in which lives the head-in-the-clouds minister John Meredith and his four "varmint" children. They wreak havoc in all the ways. 1. This is really a book about the Merediths. Pinning it to the tail end of the Anne series is almost insulting because there's no real reason for it. Anne herself barely features and her children are merely background characters to the impossibly precocious manse

2.5 stars. This book follows the adventures of Anne and Gilbert Blythe's 6 children as they grow older and meet the mischievous Meredith clan. It generally focuses on the adventures of the children, with Anne appearing only in passing. The children's adventures are amusing, but the core of the book for me was really the would-be romance between Mr. Meredith and Rosemary West. If not for that, the book would have lacked a strong emotional foundation. Many of the Meredith children's woes and

Like I always say, children are the best form of birth control. Even imaginative, sweet-natured children. Oh, lisping Rilla, being chased into the mud by a codfish-wielding Mary Vance... how I laughed uproariously over your plight, though I gathered from the soulful prose that I was meant to feel sorry for you.Seven books in, and I can't stop wondering what Anne was like in bed. When one of her litter of six was born, L. M. Montgomery wrote of a stork depositing a bundle of baby at the Blythe

LMM's stories are the absolute loveliest. I just adore her characters! This book is cute and funny and mostly light-hearted, which is exactly what I needed.

Albeit that I have most definitely always enjoyed reading about both the Meredith children and Anne and Gilbert Blythe's offspring encountering both fun and sometimes even adventure in L.M. Montgomery's Rainbow Valley (and also do find Mary Vance not only entertaining but also very much a breath of reality, of the sorry fact that neglected and abused children existed even in L.M. Montgomery's for the most part oh so positive and delightful Anne of Green Gables universe), indeed Rainbow Valley

This is actually more of the story of a widowed pastor's children and a runaway, but Anne's children also play a part in it. More beautiful writing with characters to fall in love with and a setting which you wish you could jump into! There is an undercurrent of change running through the book. Even though it was finished shortly after World War I, it takes place before the war, but more than once a hint of what's to come is given which makes it all the more poignant. With only one more book