1. REBECCA - by Daphne Du Maurier (5) 2. WUTHERING HEIGHTS - by Emily Bronte (2) 3. OLIVER TWIST - by Charles Dickens(5) 4. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE - by Jane Austen (3) 5. ANNE OF GREEN GABLES - by Lucy Maude Montgomery (5) 6. THE CATCHER IN THE RYE - by JD Salinger (2) 7. TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD - by Harper Lee (5) 8. HOWARDS END - by EM Forster(3.5) 9. SWALLOWS AND AMAZONS - by Arthur Ransome(4) 10 . A CHRISTMAS CAROL - by Charles Dickens(5) 11. FRANKENSTEIN - by Mary Shelley(4) 12. TOM'S MIDNIGHT GARDEN - by Philippa Pearce (5) 13. WIDE SARGASSO SEA - by Jean Rhys (3.5)
“A grandchild fills a space in your heart that you never knew was empty.” – Unknown
Gem - I remember reading Middlemarch at school and enjoying it. We had a really good teacher for Eng Lit and she also talked about Mary Anne Evans and how difficult it was for women to be taken seriously as authors in those days - hence her pen name - and also her personality and views on society of the time. She was way ahead of her era and lead an interesting and unusual life.
This was about the only teacher at school who talked to us about 'real' things instead of the accepted mores of the late 1950s!
"Joy is what happens to us when we allow ourselves to recognise how good things really are. "
Daisy, it's wonderful to have teacher like that who stays in your memory.
We had an English teacher, Mrs Atkinson, who had four children, two sons and two daughters (which was my ideal family at that time!) She told us little snippets of family life, was kind and interesting and was loved by all. I loved the years that she was my English teacher.
“A grandchild fills a space in your heart that you never knew was empty.” – Unknown
Gem - that's so true. Most of our teachers were very dry, academics, elderly (to us) women who never deviated from their subjects. Then in the 4th form we had a new classics teacher - a young man with a glamorous young wife, and he was our form tutor! We all loved him to bits.
"Joy is what happens to us when we allow ourselves to recognise how good things really are. "
Comment