Cranford
"Cranford" is the best known novel of 19th century English writer Elizabeth Gaskell. The book was first published in a series of episodes in a magazine that was edited by Charles Dickens entitled "Household Words". The fictional town of Cranford is closely modeled after Knutsford in Cheshire, which Mrs. Gaskell knew well. The book focuses around the lives of Mary Smith and her friends Miss Matty and Miss Deborah who are spinster sisters. We come to know many of the people of Cranford such as Miss Pole, who is supposed to be the most reasonable and enlightened of all the Cranford ladies. We learn of a former milliner named Batty Barker, who owns a cow that she loves like a daughter. We see Peter Jenkyns, the long lost brother of the spinster sisters, return from India. The novel was adapted for television by the BBC three times.
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Cranford
"Cranford" is the best known novel of 19th century English writer Elizabeth Gaskell. The book was first published in a series of episodes in a magazine that was edited by Charles Dickens entitled "Household Words". The fictional town of Cranford is closely modeled after Knutsford in Cheshire, which Mrs. Gaskell knew well. The book focuses around the lives of Mary Smith and her friends Miss Matty and Miss Deborah who are spinster sisters. We come to know many of the people of Cranford such as Miss Pole, who is supposed to be the most reasonable and enlightened of all the Cranford ladies. We learn of a former milliner named Batty Barker, who owns a cow that she loves like a daughter. We see Peter Jenkyns, the long lost brother of the spinster sisters, return from India. The novel was adapted for television by the BBC three times.
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Cranford

Cranford

by Elizabeth Gaskell
Cranford

Cranford

by Elizabeth Gaskell

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Overview

"Cranford" is the best known novel of 19th century English writer Elizabeth Gaskell. The book was first published in a series of episodes in a magazine that was edited by Charles Dickens entitled "Household Words". The fictional town of Cranford is closely modeled after Knutsford in Cheshire, which Mrs. Gaskell knew well. The book focuses around the lives of Mary Smith and her friends Miss Matty and Miss Deborah who are spinster sisters. We come to know many of the people of Cranford such as Miss Pole, who is supposed to be the most reasonable and enlightened of all the Cranford ladies. We learn of a former milliner named Batty Barker, who owns a cow that she loves like a daughter. We see Peter Jenkyns, the long lost brother of the spinster sisters, return from India. The novel was adapted for television by the BBC three times.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940011981784
Publisher: qasim idrees
Publication date: 12/29/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 436 KB

About the Author

About The Author

Tremendously popular in her lifetime, the books of the English author Elizabeth Gaskell (1810-1865) have often been overshadowed by her contemporaries the Brontës and George Eliot. Yet the reputation of her long-neglected masterpiece Wives and Daughters continues to grow. Gaskell wrote six novels in all — of which North and South and Cranford remain two of the best known — as well as numerous short stories, novellas, and a biography of her great friend Charlotte Brontё.

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