Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery

Rating: ★★★★

It’s been a while since I finished a book, but I’ve started many. According to my Goodreads, I’m currently reading 9 books. A few I own, and a few are from the library (Libby). I don’t read quite fast enough, so my loan usually expires before I finish. Then I have to put it on hold again. With Anne of Green Gables, I didn’t finish within the allotted two weeks either, but no one else had it on hold luckily!

I’ve never read Anne before and I knew nothing about it. I thought it was about an orphaned, red-headed girl who got treated badly but had an imagination. That doesn’t seem right at all after reading this book. Yes, she was badly treated in her past and she does have quite the imagination, but Anne is about something entirely different.

Anne is an orphan, and by accident she is adopted by siblings Marilla and Matthew Cuthbert of Green Gables on Prince Edward Island. They are both loving in their own way, and Anne is raised in a remarkable way. She is free to be herself. Sometimes her temper or pride get her into difficult situations, but it all works out. This book isn’t here to challenge the reader in any real way. It’s meant to be pleasant and lovable.

For me, this book romanticizes childhood, but I don’t mean that in any kind of negative way. I’m tempted to write that, “We all want…,” but I will only speak for myself. I desperately want to remember how it felt to be a child. The imagination and the dreams. The magic, fun, play, laughter, ambition, hope… How so many things were new and exciting. How the world seemed great and full of possibility. I think this book romanticizes all of that, but in a way that it should be romanticized. We, as adults, should try so hard to remember those feelings.

I haven’t read up on any history of this book. I know when it was published, and that’s about it. I’m afraid if I read about the book, I’ll be spoiled for the rest of the series. I would like to continue reading it, and even the smallest spoilers usually bother me. So I’m unsure of any intent by the author, or history of the author herself.

The reason I’m not giving the book a full five stars is because roughly the last third bothered me. Most of the book was so detailed with how Anne was growing up between the ages of about 11 and 13. And then suddenly she’s flying through the years, and I think the book ends with her being almost 17. The chapters dedicated to “young” Anne are darling. I couldn’t stop reading. I enjoyed all of Anne’s eccentricities, and Marilla’s reserved amusement. Then all of sudden, Marilla remarks that Anne doesn’t talk as much anymore. What happened between then and now?

I would have loved more time dedicated to those teenage years. Again, I don’t know how the book was published – was it serialized? I don’t know how the author wrote it – was she rushed in the end, or was a series planned from the beginning? In any case, it looks like there are eight books in total. I suppose the story from here will dedicated to Anne as an adult. I’m sure it will be interesting, but the two-thirds of Anne of Green Gables dedicated to young Anne was so special.