feather_ghyll: Girl reading a book that is resting on her knees (Default)
2024-08-22 10:58 am

REVIEW: Seven Sisters at Queen Anne's

Seven Sisters at Queen Anne’s: Evelyn Smith. Blackie, my copy is inscribed 1933

Seven sisters? Yes, the scenario set out in the book’s title is a lot, Read more... )
feather_ghyll: Woman lying under a duvet covered by text (Reading in bed)
2018-04-15 04:11 pm

REVIEW: Biddy and Quilla

Biddy and Quilla: Evelyn Smith, Blackie

Evelyn Smith provides a sympathetic look at growing pains through a burgeoning friendship here. A few plot contrivances aside, it’s realistic, psychologically accurate and amusing.

Priscilla ‘Quilla’ Thornton is Read more... )
feather_ghyll: Girl reading a book that is resting on her knees (Default)
2015-05-29 09:04 am

REVIEW: The Little Betty Wilkinson

The Little Betty Wilkinson: Evelyn Smith. Blackie

There is an explanation for the title, which seems an odd one for a school story and more suitable for a late nineteenth century/turn of the twentieth girls’ story by a Mrs A.B.C. Double-Barrel. I’ll get to it in a moment.

At the start of the book, Betty Wilkinson’s life is Read more... )
feather_ghyll: drawing of a girl from the 1920s reading a book in a bed/on a couch (Twenties girl reader)
2014-12-13 08:45 am

REVIEW: Terry's Best Term

Terry’s Best Term: Evelyn Smith Blackie (an inscription reveals that my copy was a gift in Christmas 1959, although the content suggests that it was first published during the interwar period, and an article in Folly says it was 1926,)

She thought of Terry, and her firm little face softened. She liked Terry, liked her tremendously. People always laughed at schoolgirl friendships, but then people laughed at mothers for thinking their babies so wonderful, at old maids for coddling their dogs—at lots of things, nearly all women’s things. Julia thought over that, and decided that it wasn’t fair.
(p. 170)

Read more... )
feather_ghyll: Girl reading a book that is resting on her knees (Default)
2010-07-16 10:02 pm

REVIEW: Phyllida in Form III

I just put this down with a smile on my face...

Phyllida in Form III: Evelyn Smith. Blackie 1953?

I've written about Evelyn Smith here before, but feel I should point out that if you love girls' own and haven't read anything by her, you are missing out a treat.Read more... )
feather_ghyll: Girl reading a book that is resting on her knees (Default)
2009-04-14 03:21 pm

REVIEWS: Selected Easter reading

Nicky of the Lower Fourth by Evelyn Smith (Blackie & Son.) is the first book by this authoress that I’ve ever read, but I’ll certainly keep an eye out for more from now on. Read more... )

Willingly to School: Mary Cathcart Borer Lutterworth Press 1976.

I have to admit to being underwhelmed. For one thing, surely it would have been more honest to subtitle it ‘A History of English Women’s Education’, Read more... )

Torley Grange: Gwendoline Courtney Girls Gone By Publishers, 2008.

The word that comes to me after having enjoyed reading this book on a train journey is ‘jolly’. Read more... )