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| Limberlost Cabin: the home where Gene Stratton-Porter lived, near the swamp. |
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| Gene Stratton-Porter |
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| The hunt for a Yellow Emperor moth (E imperilis) is a central theme in the novel Reproduced uder a Creative Commons Licence. |
![]() |
| Limberlost Cabin: the home where Gene Stratton-Porter lived, near the swamp. |
![]() |
| Gene Stratton-Porter |
![]() |
| The hunt for a Yellow Emperor moth (E imperilis) is a central theme in the novel Reproduced uder a Creative Commons Licence. |
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I was never interested enough in the plot to read this but I did read The Keeper of the Bees nine years ago, and I loved it. Really loved it. These are the words I wrote in my book journal:
'A man has been in a California veterans hospital for a year with shrapnel wounds in his chest. He overhears the administration people say that he will be transferred to another hospital because he will “probably” get TB. The man knows that this is the place people go to die. He simply walks away. He meets kind people. He is asked by a beekeeper to live in his house and take care of his bees and gardens while he is in the hospital. The writing is very poetical and philosophical. Simplistic, yet complex in its thoughts and observations. A truly beautiful book – hopeful, optimistic, spiritual. Belief in the goodness of nature and the humanity of people. The author wrote: “To my way of thinking and working, the greatest service a piece of fiction can do any reader is to leave him with a higher ideal of life than he had when he began. If in one small degree it shows him where he can be a gentler, saner, cleaner, kindlier man, it is a wonder working book.”
Well, she certainly accomplished this in The Keeper Of The Bees.'
The book I read was a library ILL, but I recently bought my own copy, and I have been thinking of reading it again to see if I still feel the same way.
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Well, that sounds more like…You've made it sound really interesting,so maybe I'll try this and see how how I get on!
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Trust me, you do not want to read Freckles, which features the Swamp Angel (the name alone should have warned me). I actually like A Girl of the Limberlost, but other than Freckles, I've never made it through any of her other books.
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Freckles and the Swamp Angel also appear, fairly briefly, in Girl of the Limberlost… I felt further acquaintance was unnecessary.
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I stumbled across a battered old copy of this book in my school library where it had mouldered in a corner and was interested enough to take it home. I loved it, but then I am a Rebecca/Anne of Green Gables/Pollyanna sucker for these kind of books. Recently re-read I agree it still has not aged well but I retain my fondness for it.
Little Nell – totally at one with you there!
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I like Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, and Anne of Green Gables (which I re-read recently, and will write about at some stage), and Pollyanna, but I just couldn't cope with Elnora… sorry!
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Oh goodness, I forgot all about the violin when I wrote my review. That was an eye-rolling moment indeed, although I did like the book overall more than you did.
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The fact that we all like different things is what makes the book blogging world so wonderful!
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