List Books Conducive To A Place for Margaret (Margaret Trilogy #1)
Original Title: | A Place for Margaret |
ISBN: | 0590736655 (ISBN13: 9780590736657) |
Series: | Margaret Trilogy #1 |
Bernice Thurman Hunter
Ebook | Pages: 200 pages Rating: 3.84 | 57 Users | 3 Reviews
Details Regarding Books A Place for Margaret (Margaret Trilogy #1)
Title | : | A Place for Margaret (Margaret Trilogy #1) |
Author | : | Bernice Thurman Hunter |
Book Format | : | Ebook |
Book Edition | : | First Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 200 pages |
Published | : | Best Tween/Teen/YA Books 450 books — 341 voters |
Categories | : | Cultural. Canada |
Narrative Toward Books A Place for Margaret (Margaret Trilogy #1)
Great book for young readers, and to some extents relatable! I won't include spoilers, but I will say the protagonist Margaret deals with bullshit from other people frequently, especially for having somewhat homely looks and being somewhat of an outsider due to her illness. It's all the little details including the sayings that capture the 1920's atmosphere so well, from peoples' speech and expressions to children practically living outside (they must make even the proudly nostalgic Millenials look like couch potatoes from childhood) to peoples' general ignorance about Margaret's situation (it's no wonder where she gets her mean streak from). A book worth reading!Rating Regarding Books A Place for Margaret (Margaret Trilogy #1)
Ratings: 3.84 From 57 Users | 3 ReviewsNotice Regarding Books A Place for Margaret (Margaret Trilogy #1)
She was born in Toronto, Ontario, on November 3, 1922 and died May 29, 2002. She married her high school sweetheart, Lloyd Hunter, and had two children, Anita and Heather, and four grandchildren, Meredith, Lisa, Hunter and Franceline. No Greats. Bernice was the middle child of 5 children (Wilma, Gordon, Bernice, Jack and Robert). She struggled in school because they moved so often. The BookyThis was a cute book. I still like the Booky stuff she did the best, but this was good.
Great book for young readers, and to some extents relatable! I won't include spoilers, but I will say the protagonist Margaret deals with bullshit from other people frequently, especially for having somewhat homely looks and being somewhat of an outsider due to her illness. It's all the little details including the sayings that capture the 1920's atmosphere so well, from peoples' speech and expressions to children practically living outside (they must make even the proudly nostalgic Millenials
Addictive! A tale about a city girl in the country during the depression era
Addictive! A tale about a city girl in the country during the depression era
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.