Cover of Secret Garden

Secret Garden

by Unknown Author

4.0
(89 ratings)
40 pages2020HarperCollins Publishers LimitedISBN 9780008385132
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About this book

<p>A gloriously illustrated new edition of the classic story, retold for the young and young at heart.</p> <p>Open the door and enter a world of wonder...</p> <p>Mary Lennox has grown up in India, in a world of colour and light. So, when she is orphaned and sent back to England to live with her Uncle in his grey and gloomy mansion, it seems she will never be happy again.<br>But a mysterious cry in the dark, and a hidden gate in an overgrown garden, may lead her to the greatest happiness she has ever known.</p> <p>The classic story from Frances Hodgson Burnett is here gloriously illustrated and retold for readers both young and young at heart.</p> <p>Open the door to the classic reborn for a new generation just in time to watch the new film.</p>

Publication Details

Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers Limited
Published
2020
Pages
40
ISBN
9780008385132
Language
en

About Unknown Author

Frances Hodgson Burnett was best known as an English playwright and author. Frances Eliza Hodgson was born on November 24, 1849, at Cheetham Hill, Manchester, England, to Eliza Boond and Edwin Hodgson. She was the middle child of five, with two older brothers and two younger sisters. Frances grew up in a comfortable home. Mr. Hodgson sold brass goods to upper class households, and the family had a maid, a nurse-maid, and a horse and carriage. However, in the early 1850's when Frances was only three or four years old, her father died of a stroke, and the family was forced to sell their house and move. Her mother carried on the business, and Frances was often left in the care of her grandmother, who taught her to read. Her future as a writer might have begun here. When she was about sixteen, the family moved to Knoxville, Tennessee. From then until she was nineteen, Frances supported them by selling her stories to magazines. In September 1873, she married Swan Burnett. The couple moved to Paris for two years and had there two sons. In 1892, following the death her son Lionel from tuberculosis, Frances suffered severe depression. In 1898, she divorced Swan Burnett and remarried two years later; this second marriage only lasted a year. Frances settled in Long Island, New York, where she lived for the rest of her life. She died in 1924 and rests in Roslyn Cemetery in Greenvale, New York, next to her other son, Vivian.

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