Anne of Green Gables

by L.M. Montgomery

  • Anne of Green Gables Summary

Anne of Green Gables is the story of a young orphan girl, Anne, who is mistakenly delivered to an older couple looking to adopt a boy to work on their farm in Avonlea on Prince Edward Island. After the couple meets Anne, they decide to keep her. Anne soon makes her home on the farm (called Green Gables), and her spirited nature charms the couple, who begin to see her as a daughter.

Anne struggles to adapt to life in Avonlea and often finds herself in conflict with her adoptive mother and other local women, as she has trouble acting like a “proper lady” and abiding by standard rules of etiquette and social expectations. For example, she shouts at one of her neighbors, Mrs. Rachel Lynde , after she is mocked about her red hair.

Anne is known for her vivid imagination, melodrama, and romanticism, often making up extravagant stories and scenarios. Before arriving in Avonlea, Anne invented imaginary friends to play with. She later becomes close friends with her neighbor, Diana, and begins to attend school in Avonlea. After accidentally serving Diana wine instead of raspberry juice, Diana's mother refuses to let the girls see each other, which is very upsetting for Anne. However, Anne soon redeems herself by saving Diana's sister, who is unwell with the croup.

Anne has a fair share of conflict with other classmates as well, including her ongoing conflict with Gilbert, a classmate who makes fun of Anne’s red hair, causing her to lash out. As they are both the smartest pupils at school, they develop a rivalry in the classroom.

Anne and Gilbert’s intelligence lands them each a place at the prestigious Queen’s Academy, and the two develop a more friendly relationship despite the persisting rivalry between them. While attending the academy, Anne puts excellent effort into her studies and earns the Avery Scholarship, awarding her money to fund her tuition for a four-year college, should she choose to enroll in the fall. However, Anne’s adoptive father (Matthew) dies of a heart attack, and her adoptive mother, Marilla, is losing her eyesight and likely to go blind. Instead of attending a four-year college and earning her degree, Anne chooses to remain at Green Gables and help Marilla manage the farm.

After hearing of Anne’s situation, Gilbert sacrifices his job as a teacher at the Avonlea school so that Anne may teach there while remaining close to Marilla and to Green Gables. Anne and Gilbert become close friends and Anne looks forward to her future, despite the obstacles she has had and will have to overcome.

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Anne of Green Gables Questions and Answers

The Question and Answer section for Anne of Green Gables is a great resource to ask questions, find answers, and discuss the novel.

Marilla was, regretting that she could not go to the concert herself to hear her girl recite.

What are the names of the brother and sister that were hoping to adopt a boy orphan?

Marilla and Matthew Cuthbert

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Study Guide for Anne of Green Gables

Anne of Green Gables study guide contains a biography of L.M. Montgomery, literature essays, quiz questions, major themes, characters, and a full summary and analysis.

  • About Anne of Green Gables
  • Character List

Essays for Anne of Green Gables

Anne of Green Gables essays are academic essays for citation. These papers were written primarily by students and provide critical analysis of Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery.

  • Gender Construction and Nature in L.M. Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables
  • Womanhood in Anne of Green Gables
  • The Rejection of Maternalism in L.M. Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables
  • Who Are You, Anne with an "E?": Naming in Anne of Green Gables
  • Language, Power, and Gender: The Power Dynamics of Language and Social Class in Three Children’s Books

Lesson Plan for Anne of Green Gables

  • About the Author
  • Study Objectives
  • Common Core Standards
  • Introduction to Anne of Green Gables
  • Relationship to Other Books
  • Bringing in Technology
  • Notes to the Teacher
  • Related Links
  • Anne of Green Gables Bibliography

Wikipedia Entries for Anne of Green Gables

  • Introduction
  • Publication history

book report on anne of green gables

Anne Of Green Gables

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63 pages • 2 hours read

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Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Chapters 1-4

Chapters 5-9

Chapters 10-14

Chapters 15-19

Chapters 20-23

Chapters 24-28

Chapters 29-33

Chapters 34-38

Character Analysis

Symbols & Motifs

Important Quotes

Essay Topics

Discussion Questions

Summary and Study Guide

Anne of Green Gables is a world-renowned classic children’s novel first published in 1908 by Canadian author L. M. Montgomery. Set in the latter part of the 19th century in fictional Avonlea, a small town on Prince Edward Island, Canada, the story follows the accidental arrival of a precocious 11-year-old orphan girl, Anne Shirley , at Green Gables, the family homestead of middle-aged siblings Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert . Many mishaps, adventures, and ultimate successes follow Anne as she grows up and grows closer to the Cuthberts, and the novel explores the journey of how true familial bonds are forged even in the toughest of times. Anne of Green Gables has been translated into 36 languages and has sold over 50 million copies worldwide, and its central red-headed heroine has been immortalized in many films and television shows. Anne is the first novel in an original eight-part series, with a ninth sequel published after the author’s death. This literary guide uses the Barnes and Noble hardcover edition.

Plot Summary

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Anne Shirley, an 11-year-old orphan girl from Nova Scotia, is sent to live with Marilla and Matthew Cuthbert , two middle-aged siblings who live at Green Gables on Prince Edward Island. Anne’s upbringing has been one of despair and dismay; she bounces from home to home, never being truly wanted, and her initial visit to Green Gables is no exception: the Cuthberts sent for a young boy to help on the farm, but Anne is delivered instead.

Matthew quickly takes to the young girl, whose idle chatter prevents the shy bachelor from ever having to speak, but Anne meets her match in Marilla, a practical, sensible spinster who cannot bear Anne’s vivid imagination. Though Marilla wants to send Anne back to the orphanage immediately, she allows Anne to stay because Matthew does not want to send the girl back to horrible conditions at the orphanage. Marilla decides she will take it upon herself to bring Anne up properly.

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This proves to be easier said than done, as Anne has a spirit and a mind of her own. She constantly finds herself in mishaps and scrapes, most of which require penance or an apology. From flying off the handle when Mrs. Rachel, a close friend and neighbor of Marilla’s, teases her about her looks to creating false, dramatic confessions to get herself out of trouble, there is never a dull moment with Anne. Before she can help herself, Marilla finds herself welcoming the girl’s company more and more.

Anne finds a close friend, a “kindred spirit” as she calls them, in the form of Diana Barry , who lives on the next farm over. When Anne starts school in Avonlea, she quickly becomes the smartest girl in the room and one of the most liked, but it is her relationship with the handsome and intelligent Gilbert Blythe that makes school worthwhile for Anne. Her distaste for him, spurred by his nickname for her—“Carrots,” a jab at her red hair—causes her to compete with him at every corner.

When she is 16, Anne sits for the entrance examination to Queen’s Academy with the help of her teacher, Miss Stacy . She earns her teaching certificate in one year instead of the usual two and wins the Avery Scholarship, a $250 a year grant to four-year Redmond College. However, Matthew’s tragic death of a heart attack when he hears that they have fallen into financial ruin due to a bank failure makes Anne reconsider her future plans. Anne chooses to give up the scholarship and stay at Green Gables with Marilla so that she doesn’t have to sell the family home. Gilbert gives up his teaching position at the Avonlea school so she can take it and be closer to home, and the two reconcile at the end of the novel, with the promise of a close friendship on the horizon.

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Book Review

Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

A Timeless Story of Growing Up and Finding Your Place

Title: Anne of Green Gables

Author: L. M. Montgomery

Publisher: L. C. Page

Genre: Classic, Coming-of-age novel

First Publication: 1908

Language:  English

Major Characters: Marilla Cuthbert, Matthew Cuthbert, Diana Barry, Gilbert Blythe, Rachel Lynde, Anne Blythe, Anne Shirley

Setting Place: Avonlea, Prince Edward Island (Canada)

Theme: The conflict between imagination and expectation; sentimentality versus emotion

Narrator:  Third Person

Book Summary: Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

This heartwarming story has beckoned generations of readers into the special world of Green Gables, an old-fashioned farm outside a town called Avonlea. Anne Shirley, an eleven-year-old orphan, has arrived in this verdant corner of Prince Edward Island only to discover that the Cuthberts—elderly Matthew and his stern sister, Marilla—want to adopt a boy, not a feisty redheaded girl. But before they can send her back, Anne—who simply must have more scope for her imagination and a real home—wins them over completely.

A much-loved classic that explores all the vulnerability, expectations, and dreams of a child growing up, Anne of Green Gables  is also a wonderful portrait of a time, a place, a family… and, most of all, love.

Book Review - Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery

Book Review: Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

Anne of Green Gables is the story of a young orphaned girl named, you guessed it, Anne. Born in Nova Scotia only to lose both of her parents from the fever at the age of three months, Anne has grown up in many households, never being able to stay in one place for long. As you can imagine, this has left young Anne feeling needy and unwanted .

And when siblings Marilla and Matthew decide to adopt a boy to help work on their farm, they never expect to get a girl instead. Naturally, their first instinct is to give her to someone else; but soon after, under the influence of Anne’s pleading, they decide that with them is where she shall stay.

“t’s been my experience that you can nearly always enjoy things if you make up your mind firmly that you will.

Anne is a funny child – she’s positive and hopeful and talkative. It’s impossible not to like her. As an adult reading this I understand Marilla because the child definitely was willful and up to getting into accidental mischief, although the beginning where they didn’t want her because she was a ‘useful boy’, it was just a shame of the times. I’m glad she was around to bring so much joy around to Avonlea, Marilla, Matthew and neighbors. When she amused them with her stories, she amused me at the same time.

Because when you are imagining, you might as well imagine something worth while.

Each chapter is divided into an incident or event, which worked well for this type of the story. Montgomery’s writing style is a delight, especially considering how old the book is. I can see why this classic has lasted through the ages. Through the afterword I found out how much it meant in particular countries for their hope after the war. Inspiring stuff.

One of the most remarkable things about Anne of Green Gables is the way it captures the beauty of nature and the wonder of childhood. The descriptions of the Prince Edward Island landscape are vivid and lush, transporting the reader to a simpler time and place. Anne’s character is also incredibly endearing, with her lively imagination and irrepressible spirit. Despite the challenges she faces, she never loses her sense of wonder and optimism.

Another highlight of the book is its exploration of friendship and family. Anne develops close relationships with the people around her, including her adoptive family, her classmates, and her neighbors. Through these connections, she learns the importance of forgiveness, empathy, and perseverance. The novel also portrays the power of community and the ways in which people can come together to support one another in times of need.

I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers.

This book works so well because it takes an unconventional girl filled with hope and wonder in the world, a girl who loves Octobers, nature, beauty, kindred spirits and friends. One loyal and ambitious and full of daydreams. I think this calls to something in all of us, a type of hopeful wonder that the world is always beautiful despite whatever wrenches are thrown in the way. This isn’t the say Anne doesn’t have a funny, frightful temper or that she doesn’t hit with woes when warranted – actually she feels the intensity of lows as much as highs, making her a dramatic sort. This only makes her more endearing.

Overall, Anne of Green Gables is a charming and heartwarming novel that has stood the test of time. Its themes of love, friendship, and the joys of childhood continue to resonate with readers of all ages. Whether you are rediscovering the book or reading it for the first time, it is a delightful journey that is sure to leave you with a smile on your face.

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book report on anne of green gables

Anne of Green Gables

L. m. montgomery, everything you need for every book you read..

One June day in Avonlea, Prince Edward Island, Mrs. Rachel Lynde notices her reclusive neighbor, Matthew Cuthbert , driving off in his buggy. Curious, she goes to visit her friend, Matthew’s sister Marilla , who lives with him on Green Gables farm. To Rachel’s shock, Marilla tells her that she and Matthew are adopting an orphan boy from Nova Scotia.

Meanwhile, at the train station, Matthew doesn’t find the expected boy, but an 11-year-old girl with red hair instead. Matthew is thrown off guard by the sweet, talkative, big-eyed girl and can’t bear to disappoint her, so he brings her back to Green Gables, where he and Marilla learn that her name is Anne . Anne is heartbroken that the Cuthberts might not keep her, but after hearing about Anne’s lonely, orphaned childhood, Marilla comes around to Matthew’s opinion—Anne might not be the “useful” boy they’d wanted to work on the farm, but she needs the Cuthberts’ compassion. Anne is overjoyed to be allowed to stay.

Anne begins to get acquainted with the beauties of Green Gables, the household duties she’ll have to fulfill, and the Christian beliefs she’s expected to hold. There are frequent mishaps, like Anne’s rage at Mrs. Lynde for criticizing her red hair, about which Anne is quite sensitive. However, even though Marilla often rebukes Anne for daydreaming and neglecting her chores, both she and Matthew find Anne’s imaginative talk interesting and enlivening, and soon they can’t imagine Green Gables without her.

Anne has always longed for a “bosom friend,” which she soon finds in Diana Barry , a girl who lives on a neighboring farm, and they play together all summer. In the fall, Anne starts off well at Avonlea school, but then she’s teased by Gilbert Blythe , a handsome boy in her grade, for her carrot-colored hair. In retaliation, Anne cracks her slate over Gilbert’s head and gets in big trouble. Another day, her teacher, Mr. Phillips , scapegoats Anne when a crowd of students arrives late, and she’s forced to sit next to Gilbert as punishment. Anne develops a fierce grudge against both Gilbert and the teacher, and Marilla humors her refusal to attend school for a while.

In a fateful episode, Anne invites Diana over for tea and, instead of serving her the raspberry cordial Marilla had set aside, she unintentionally gets Diana drunk on currant wine. Mrs. Barry then decides Anne is a wicked girl and forbids their friendship, prompting Anne to return to school in her desperation to see Diana. Though Diana can no longer play with her, Anne takes a renewed interest in her studies and a growing academic rivalry with Gilbert. One winter night, while most of the adults are attending a political rally, Anne saves the life of Minnie May , Diana’s baby sister, because she knows the remedy for croup. In gratitude, Mrs. Barry allows Anne and Diana to be friends again. The two get into various adventures together, like accidentally terrifying Diana’s visiting elderly Aunt Josephine , and convincing themselves that the nearby woods are haunted.

When a new minister comes to Avonlea, Anne quickly finds a “kindred spirit” and model in his warm-hearted wife, Mrs. Allan . The new schoolteacher, Miss Stacy , also becomes Anne’s mentor and encourager, and Anne flourishes even more in school with poetry recitations and written compositions. Matthew, who indulges Anne more than Marilla does, gets Anne her long-coveted dress with fashionable puffed sleeves, and Anne forms a story club to help her friends cultivate their imaginations. Though Anne believes she’s outgrowing her most glaring weaknesses, she still struggles with vanity over her red hair, leading to a disastrous dye job. Now 13, Anne even finds herself beginning to soften toward Gilbert Blythe—especially after he rescues her from drowning in Barrys’ pond—though her stubborn pride keeps her from accepting his offer of friendship.

At the beginning of Anne’s third school year in Avonlea, Miss Stacy organizes a class of her most promising students, including Anne, to study for the Entrance exam to Queen’s Academy. Anne works hard and continues to thrive, and at the end of the school year, she and Gilbert tie for the highest exam scores in all of Prince Edward Island, broadening Anne’s ambitions for the future. The following September, Matthew and Marilla, both tearful over Anne’s growing up, say goodbye as Anne settles into Queen’s for the year, along with a handful of Avonlea friends. Anne excels in an accelerated teacher licensing course, and though she’s bested by Gilbert for the highest academic honor, she wins a prestigious scholarship to study English at Redmond College. She returns to Green Gables anticipating a glorious summer.

On Anne’s second morning at home, however, Matthew abruptly dies of a heart attack, devasting both Anne and Marilla. Soon thereafter, Marilla sees a specialist and learns that unless she takes measures to preserve her eyesight, she’ll be blind within six months. After wrestling with her dreams and her sense of duty, Anne decides to decline the Redmond scholarship in order to work as a schoolteacher and help Marilla at home. She expects to get a job in a neighboring village, but she soon learns that Gilbert has given up the position at Avonlea school so that Anne can teach closer to home. Walking home from Matthew’s grave one day, Anne comes upon Gilbert and shyly thanks him for this sacrifice. The two finally reconcile and agree to be good friends, talking easily and warmly together for the first time. Anne happily goes home to Marilla at Green Gables, full of contentment and hope for the future.

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book report on anne of green gables

Book Review: Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery

Between 1909 and 1939, Lucy Maud Montgomery wrote seven books about an imaginative, talkative, high-spirited heroine named Anne Shirley, beginning with this one. Set in the tiny years of the 20th century, in the tiny Canadian province of Prince Edward Island, on a farm near the (fictitious) tiny town of Avonlea,  Anne of Green Gables  is the most popular book in the series. In its first hundred years of existence, it has become firmly established as a classic of children’s literature. And no wonder. It is pure joy to read. From the first moment she appears, Anne is a delightful companion for the imagination of any child, or any adult who still has one.

When we first meet Anne, she is a tiny, thin, pale orphan with bright red hair in braids. Sweet-natured, cheerful, vivacious – well, let’s be honest, she’s downright chatty – Anne has an eye for beauty and a vibrant inner life full of quirky imaginings. But she’s had a rough first eleven years or so. Bounced from one foster family to another, each of whom treated her as hired help, she has at last landed in a bleak, city orphanage in her native Nova Scotia.

Along come a shy old bachelor farmer named Matthew Cuthbert and his spinster sister Marilla. They decide to adopt a boy to help them around the farm, and to take over when they get too old to work. In a bizarre mixup involving an adoption by proxy, a boat, and a train, poor Matthew is surprised to find a redheaded girl waiting for him at the station. He is too tongue-tied to tell her she isn’t wanted. So he drives her home and listens to her talk, murmuring “Well now, I dunno” now and then when an answer seems required. And he falls right in love with her imagination and her spirit, right there in an open buggy on the road to Avonlea. By the time they get home to Green Gables farm, Matthew hasn’t the heart to tell her she must be sent back to the orphanage.

When he thought of that rapt light being quenched in her eyes he had an uncomfortable feeling that he was going to assist at murdering something – much the same feeling that came over him when he had to kill a lamb or calf or any other innocent little creature.

Marilla Cuthbert is another story. Stern and severe in her Calvinist thrift and discipline, she considers feelings of warmth and tenderness almost shameful things, things to be overcome or at least hidden. Nevertheless, Matthew prevails on Marilla, in his slow persistent way, to let Anne stay with them. Marilla quickly takes charge of the girl’s upbringing and begins trying to rein in her flights of fancy and her appetite for pretty fripperies. The relationship that develops between them is fascinating, funny, and frequently touching.

The book follows Anne through her primary-school and high-school years. It situates her childhood in the idyllic country surroundings of rural P.E.I., in a small, close-knit community where neighbors talk to each other over the fence. It details her dreams and adventures in the woods and meadows around Green Gables, her friendships and enmities with local girls and boys – most particularly Gilbert Blythe, who seems destined to win her heart someday, though for several years she refuses to speak to him or of him. It depicts the sparkle of a winning personality who overcomes every heart set against her, from the nosy, know-it-all Mrs. Rachel Lynde across the road to the strict mother and great-aunt of her bosom friend Diana Barry. And though the merry mischief in her matures and mellows, it is never quenched.

Prepare to laugh at Anne’s blunders and accidents. Prepare to grip the book with white fingers as she gets into scrapes and misunderstandings. Prepare to be captivated by an effortless flow of beautiful imagery, delicate humor, and swift-paced narrative. L. M. Montgomery’s prose reminds me of Austen, but in more modern language; or perhaps Dickens, but with a faster cadence, leaner style, and brighter outlook on the world. It’s good-humored writing about a uniquely marvelous, good-humored heroine. I am so glad to have met her. I urge you to make her acquaintance soon.

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Anne of green gables, common sense media reviewers.

book report on anne of green gables

Beloved classic features lovable, imaginative heroine.

Anne of Green Gables Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this book.

Kids will learn about day-to-day life in late-1800

The book celebrates imagination, creativity, frien

Anne is the poster girl for learning from your mis

A few episodes find Anne lashing out in anger or s

Very mild flirting between some characters, and ta

Anne accidentally gets Diana drunk during a tea pa

Parents need to know that this classic 1908 children's novel by L.M. Montomgery remains a perennial favorite thanks to its memorable heroine: irrepressible red-headed orphan Anne Shirley. Anne's adventures are full of amusing (and occasionally mildly dangerous) scrapes, but she's quick to learn from her…

Educational Value

Kids will learn about day-to-day life in late-1800s Canada, from cooking and cleaning tasks to farm chores. There are also worthwhile lessons about friendship, honesty, and family.

Positive Messages

The book celebrates imagination, creativity, friendship, community, and embracing family wherever you happen to find it. Characters learn lessons from their mistakes, and Anne, especially, tries to improve herself when her flaws are pointed out.

Positive Role Models

Anne is the poster girl for learning from your mistakes -- her impulsiveness and enthusiasm lead her into scrapes of all kinds, but she usually means well and is quick (in most cases) to make amends, though she can also hold a grudge. She's also smart, imaginative, independent, hardworking, and creative; in other words, an excellent role model for girls. Marilla and Matthew are loving (if not demonstrative) caregivers, and they parent Anne the best way they know how.

Violence & Scariness

A few episodes find Anne lashing out in anger or stuck in mildly perilous situations -- walking atop a roof, for instance, or floating in a leaky boat -- but there's no real violence or danger. A key character's death is very sad. References to spanking and some corporal punishment in school, which was accurate for the time period. Anne enjoys tragic tales of woe and imagines many of them.

Did you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Violence & Scariness in your kid's entertainment guide.

Sex, Romance & Nudity

Very mild flirting between some characters, and talk of "beaux" (aka boyfriends). A teacher pays special attention to one of his teen students (which is less scandalous in Anne's time than it would be today but is still a little eyebrow-raising).

Did you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Sex, Romance & Nudity in your kid's entertainment guide.

Drinking, Drugs & Smoking

Anne accidentally gets Diana drunk during a tea party due to a bottle mix-up.

Did you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Drinking, Drugs & Smoking in your kid's entertainment guide.

Parents Need to Know

Parents need to know that this classic 1908 children's novel by L.M. Montomgery remains a perennial favorite thanks to its memorable heroine: irrepressible red-headed orphan Anne Shirley. Anne's adventures are full of amusing (and occasionally mildly dangerous) scrapes, but she's quick to learn from her mistakes and usually has only the best of intentions. Although Anne gets her best friend drunk in one episode (it's an honest mistake), there's very little here that's at all iffy for kids -- though younger readers might get a bit bogged down in the many descriptions of Anne's Prince Edward Island, Canada, home. A sad death may hit some kids hard, but the book's messages about the importance of love, friendship, family, and ambition are worth it.

Where to Read

Community reviews.

  • Parents say (12)
  • Kids say (31)

Based on 12 parent reviews

Best book series out there

The absolute classic, what's the story.

When aging siblings Marilla and Mathew Cuthbert of Avonlea, a small town in Canada's maritime province of Prince Edward Island, decide to adopt an orphan boy to help with their farm, they never expect to get talkative 11-year-old redhead Anne Shirley instead. Anne's arrival at Green Gables immediately stirs up the Cuthberts' predictable, even-keeled lives -- and before long, they're so attached to her that they can't bring themselves to send her back to the orphan asylum after all. With her vivid imagination, mile-a-minute chatter, and impulsive, love-starved heart, Anne has an impact on everyone she meets in Avonlea, from busybody Rachel Lynde to \"bosom friend\" Diana Barry to handsome Gilbert Blythe, the boy who dares to call Anne \"Carrots.\"

Is It Any Good?

More than a century after she first beguiled readers, Anne Shirley is still one of the most beloved characters in children's literature -- and for good reason. You can't help but be charmed by her mix of chatter, imagination, fierce loyalty, and enthusiasm. Her tendency for the dramatic -- both the dizzying heights of joy and the depths of despair -- makes her relatable and sympathetic, and her ability to see beauty in everything is inspiring.

Montgomery's knack for creating memorable characters and realistic dialogue makes ANNE OF GREEN GABLES extremely readable, though reluctant readers (or younger kids in general) may balk at her many descriptions of Prince Edward Island's natural splendors. Those who are ready for Anne's adventures, though, will find her a delightful companion -- and will be excited to follow her through the book's multiple sequels.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

Families can talk about what makes a book a classic. Are all old books automatically "classics"? Why do you think this particular story stands the test of time?

Do you consider Anne a role model? Is she like any kids you know in real life? How do you think she'd be different if the book were written today?

Why is imagination so important to Anne? What sets her apart from the other Avonlea children?

Book Details

  • Author : L.M. Montgomery
  • Genre : Coming of Age
  • Book type : Fiction
  • Publisher : Bantam Books
  • Publication date : June 1, 1908
  • Publisher's recommended age(s) : 9 - 12
  • Number of pages : 336
  • Last updated : June 4, 2020

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Research shows a connection between kids' healthy self-esteem and positive portrayals in media. That's why we've added a new "Diverse Representations" section to our reviews that will be rolling out on an ongoing basis. You can help us help kids by suggesting a diversity update.

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Anne of Green Gables books in order

Anne of Green Gables books in order – All 12 of them!

Are you a fan of the Anne of Green Gables book series ? Or maybe, this is your first introduction to the series? Either way, it’s important to read the Anne of Green Gables books in order .

Many of us grew up on the Anne of Green Gables book series and love both the heroines and the heroes in the books. I always loved the old-fashioned feel and pace of the stories .

So, here is a list of the Anne of Green Gables books.

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Summer Escapes

Anne of Green Gables book series

1. anne of green gables.

Many of us grew up reading the Anne of Green Gable book series , so we fondly remember the 11-year old, red-headed orphan Anne Shirley. Anne is sent to the home of Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert by mistake. She is not the sturdy boy they were expecting to help them on the farm.

Instead, they received a mischievous, talkative redheaded girl with a fierce temper, who tumbles into one scrape after another. Anne is not like anybody else, the Cuthberts agree; she is special, a girl with an enormous imagination.

All she’s ever wanted is to belong somewhere. And the longer she stays at Green Gables, the harder it is for anyone to imagine life without her.

book report on anne of green gables

2. Anne of Avonlea

The second in the Anne of Green Gables book series is Anne of Avonlea . This one starts with Anne at sixteen, and all grown up…well kind of. Anne begins her job as the new school teacher, and the challenges and adventures begin.

Along with teaching the three Rs, Anne is learning just how complicated like can be. And, of course, she can’t help but meddle in everyone else’s affairs.

book report on anne of green gables

3. Anne of the Island

In the third of the Anne of Green Gables books series, Anne is off to college. New adventures lie ahead for Anne and her old friend Prissy, and their new friend Philippa.

Anne discovers the big city of Kingsport, where Redmond College is located. Rural Avonlea becomes a memory tucked aside for now. Life is filled with new surprises and many adventures!

book report on anne of green gables

4. Anne of Windy Poplar

As we move through the Anne of Green Gables books in order, the fourth is Anne of Windy Poplar. In this one, Anne has left Redmond College behind to begin a new job and a new chapter of her life away from Green Gables.

Anne’s new job is principal of Summerside High School in Summerside. But, the Pringles aren’t happy about that. They are just one of the challenges Anne must face.

But Anne has friends and set her mind to winning over the prickly Pringles.

book report on anne of green gables

5. Anne’s House of Dreams

The fifth book in the Anne of Green Gables book series is Anne’s House of Dreams. Anne’s true love, Gilbert Blythe, has become a doctor. And he and Anne are ready to speak their vows to each other.

But, a new life comes not only with a dream house, but new problems to solve and new surprises.

book report on anne of green gables

6. Anne of Ingleside

As we continue through the Anne of Green Gables books in order, the sixth book is Anne of Ingleside. Anne is the mother of five children with another on the way. She loves her life and Ingleside, but what she doesn’t love is that Aunt Mary Maria is wearing out her welcome.

Concerned that her beloved Gilbert might not love her anymore, Anne is ready to make her husband fall in love with her all over again!

book report on anne of green gables

7. Rainbow Valley

If you’re reading the Anne of Green Gables books in order, and you definitely should, then the next in the series is Rainbow Valley. In this book we find Anne married to her true love with six children.

This book focuses more on Anne’s new neighbor, John Meredith, the new Presbyterian minister and the interactions between the two families children.

book report on anne of green gables

8. Rilla of Ingleside

The eighth of the Anne of Green Gables books in order brings us to the end of the series. In this final book, Anne’s children are mostly grown up except for Rilla.

Rilla is high-spirited, pretty and looking forward to her first dance and hopefully her first kiss. But, unthinkable challenges arise when a far off war changes everything. She is swept into a drama that tests her courage and leaves her changed forever.

book report on anne of green gables

Other Anne of Green Gables books

While these books aren’t necessarily part of the Anne of Green Gables book series, they are lovely additions for any fan of the series.

Anne of Green Gables: A Coloring Book Visit to Avonlea

A beautiful and relaxing way to visit Avonlea. Color your way through Prince Edward Island, where we were first introduced to a young Anne Shirley. This coloring book follows the first in the Anne of Green Gables book series.

Follow Anne on her adventures through the beautifully drawn images by Jae-Eun Lee.

book report on anne of green gables

Anne of Green Gables Cookbook

If you are enjoying the Anne of Green Gables books in order, then you will want to check out this Anne of Green Gables Cookbook. Join Anne Shirley and her friends in Avonlea with the charming recipes in  The Anne of Green Gables Cookbook , a recipe collection inspired by L.M. Montgomery’s famous children’s book series,  Anne of Green Gables .

Have you ever wanted to sneak a sip of Diana Barry’s Favorite  Raspberry Cordial  or try a slice of Anne Shirley’s  Liniment Cake  (without the liniment!)? Now you can, with the delightful teatime snacks, mains, desserts, and more created by Kate Macdonald, L.M. Montgomery’s granddaughter.

From  Poetical Egg Salad Sandwiches  and  Marilla’s Plum Pudding with Caramel Pudding Sauce  (without the mouse!) to  Gilbert’s Hurry-Up Dinner , the recipes included here are mentioned throughout the books in the  Anne of Green Gables  series, along with recipes from L.M. Montgomery’s own kitchen. With a lovely grosgrain ribbon, full-color photography, whimsical illustrations, and quotes and anecdotes, this cookbook is the ideal gift for all “kindred spirits” and lovers of Avonlea.

book report on anne of green gables

Christmas with Anne and other holiday stories

This book, while not part of the Anne of Green Gables series, shares a short story of our beloved Anne at Christmas time. There are also a few other sweet Christmas stories from author LM Montgomery to warm your heart.

book report on anne of green gables

The Landscapes of Anne of Green Gables

Brought to us by author Catherine Reid, The Landscapes of Anne of Green Gables explores L. M. Montgomery’s deep connection to the landscapes of Prince Edward Island that inspired her to write the beloved Anne of Green Gables series. And while this books is not part of the Anne of Green Gables book series, it is a beautiful addition to it.

From the Lake of Shining Waters and the Haunted Wood to Lover’s Lane, you’ll be immersed in the real places immortalized in the novels.

Using Montgomery’s journals, archives, and scrapbooks, Catherine Reid explores the many similarities between Montgomery and her unforgettable heroine, Anne Shirley. The lush package includes Montgomery’s hand-colorized photographs, the illustrations originally used in  Anne of Green Gables , and contemporary and historical photography.

book report on anne of green gables

List of Anne of Green Gables books

So, there you have it. The complete list of Anne of Green Gables books in order for you.

And, as you can see from the progression of the series, it is important to read the Anne of Green Gables books in order. We meet young Anne in the first book at 11-years old and progress through her life to the last book when Anne’s children are grown up.

And, if you find yourself wanting more of the Anne of Green Gables series, then definitely check out the coloring book and cookbook. They will provide hours of creative fun!

book report on anne of green gables

Hit the Best Destinations

This summer, travel to your must-see destinations through the pages of these great books!

Sign up and get a list of 10 of the Top Destinations and what book to read for each destination.

You can unsubscribe anytime. For more details, review our Privacy Policy .

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Becki is the author and founder of A Book Lover’s Adventures. She has a degree in elementary education, has worked and volunteered in libraries for years, and spent several years in the travel industry. All of this has led to a love of books and travel. Becki loves to share her love by finding literary escapes to share!

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Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

Anne of Green Gables Book Activities | L. M. Montgomery

Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery is the beloved classic about a young orphan girl growing up on Prince Edward Island, Canada in the late 1800s. Anne is vivacious and verbose, much to the surprise of most of the more traditional residents of the small village of Avonlea.

She is ambitious at a time when women had few options. She is also quite adept at naming her emotions and working through her troubles and conflicts with others by talking them out. She has a vivid imagination and readers will delight in her constant amazement at the beauty of the natural world. This coming of age story is one that students have enjoyed reading for over a century and we can bet they will continue for a hundred more.

Student Activities for Anne of Green Gables

Anne of Green Gables Characters

Essential Questions for Anne of Green Gables

  • Who are the main characters in Anne of Green Gables and what challenges do they face?
  • How do the main characters evolve throughout the course of the book?
  • What is the setting of the novel and how does it help shape the characters?
  • What are some of the themes , symbols , and motifs present in the novel? How do they help you better understand the characters and their motivations?

Anne of Green Gables Summary

Anne of Green Gables is set in the late 1800s in Avonlea, a fictional village on Prince Edward Island in Canada. Anne Shirley is an 11-year-old orphan who has never known a loving and stable family. She has grown up in foster homes that treated more as a servant than a daughter. That is until a fortunate mistake brings her to Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert. They're a pair of elderly siblings who live on their small family farm, Green Gables. They had expected the orphanage to send them a boy to help with the farm chores. Marilla initially balks at the thought of having a girl but decides to keep Anne out of a sense of duty and the goodness of her heart. She laments to Matthew that a girl won't be as useful on the farm, to which Matthew replies, "We might be some good to her."

Anne's previous revolving door of foster families were neglectful and abusive, and Anne coped by developing her broad imagination. She loved to retreat to a world of make believe with imaginary friends who showed her the love and kindness she craved. Anne is ever hopeful and marvels in amazement at the natural world much to Matthew's bemused delight. Matthew is quickly won over by Anne's inquisitive and sweet nature. Marilla takes a bit longer to warm up to Anne, but she eventually does so wholeheartedly. Anne quickly disrupts the Cuthberts' quiet life with her boisterous and talkative personality. She is naïve to social and religious norms, which the conservative townsfolk find quite shocking. Anne often gets into trouble, but she is also hard working, excels in school and, as she says, "never makes the same mistake twice." Eventually, Anne's quick thinking endears her to even the most skeptical residents like the gossipy neighbor, Mrs. Lynde, and the wealthy and haughty Barry family. Anne even becomes best friends with their elegant daughter, Diana Barry. Anne also develops a secret admiration for her arch nemesis, the clever and mischievous Gilbert Blythe.

Despite initial difficulties, Anne does very well in school with the unwavering support of Matthew and Marilla. Through hard work and the steady mentoring from her beloved teacher Miss Stacy, Anne scores top of her class on her entrance exams, allowing her to attend Queens academy in Charlottetown. While there, Anne's persistence and determination continues and she wins a college scholarship. Matthew tells Anne, “Well now, I'd rather have you than a dozen boys, Anne... Just mind you that—rather than a dozen boys. Well now, I guess it wasn't a boy that took the Avery scholarship, was it? It was a girl—my girl—my girl that I'm proud of.”

At the turn of the century, when women still did not have the right to vote , the author makes a striking commentary on the rights and ambitions of women with such a strong female protagonist. While the novel is over a hundred years old, students can still find Anne quite relatable. After all, she is a child who prefers daydreaming to chores, she longs for a true friend she can confide in, she admires the latest fashions and frets about her looks, she makes mistakes often, and is quick to lose her temper. In essence, she is like any child in any time period! All of which make Anne of Green Gables a true classic for the ages.

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Anne of Green Gables Book Review: A reading delight for anyone who has “imagination”

Love reading simple yet captivating stories? Then this wonderful book called Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery will easily satiate your heart. “You’re a bookworm!”, “NERD!!!”, “You need to look up from the book and see what’s going on around, you know…”. These were dialogues that I heard very often while growing up. When everyone around was concerned that I was a bookworm, I used to consider that a compliment. And I still do. Just that, somewhere during the confusing years of late teenage, I unknowingly replaced the book with a cell phone. And man, do I regret that! Very recently something happened that made me realize how dependent I had become on my phone. I needed to take a serious break from technology. And the best place to shift my focus was into my old companions; books. So, I undertook a challenge where I vowed to read 52 books in a year. And this is the book review of the seventh book on this journey.

Table of contents

How i came across the book, anne of green gables, anne shirley; the girl i saw on the other side of the mirror i peeped into as a child, an ending that made me smile through tears, anne of green gables book summary, some anne of green gables quotes that i found most appealing, what i did like about the book, anne of green gables, what i did not like about the book, anne of green gables, genre, style and narrative of the book, anne of green gables, about the author, how much would i rate the book, anne of green gables, where to get the book, anne of green gables, anne of green gables book review.

Anne of Green Gables Book Review

Most of the books I read in this challenge have a story behind them. To know the story behind this one, let’s go back to my childhood. Our school reopened after the summer holidays in June. And about two weeks before school started, my dad used to get me all the texts needed for that academic year. Among all those books, there were two books that got my special attention. One, was the English text, of course. The other was Mathematics. Like you would have guessed, those were the two subjects I was most fond of. And by the time school started, I would have already gone through both these books completely at least once. The same thing happened when I was about to go to eighth grade. While I was reading my English text of that year, I stumbled upon a very amusing chapter called “Anne’s confession”.

It was the first time when I fell in love with Anne Shirley. The story was so good that I couldn’t wait for our English lessons to begin when school reopened. And after Sister Stany, my favorite English teacher explained that chapter, I was impatient to read the original novel from which it was taken. I discovered it was called Anne of Green Gables . I tried to get my hand on that novel at every other bookstore I visited. Unfortunately, the book was not available anywhere. And since the online shopping system was not yet prevalent during the day, I had to retreat to disappointment. As time went by, I forgot about the book. That was until a few days back, when I ran into that name once again, while scrolling for good books on Amazon. A wave of nostalgia hit me. I ordered the book, without any further delay.

Anne of Green Gables Book review

Anne of Green Gables Book Review

When I read Anne of Green Gables , a plethora of emotions flew down my heart. It is not possible to express them in a nutshell. So, I am presenting this book review in the form of some points that deserve to be elaborated:

Have you ever read a book or watched a movie and found that one of the characters is exactly your carbon copy? That you relate to the character so well that you can’t help but wonder if the author had somehow observed your own life? Well, that is Anne Shirley from Anne of Green Gables for me.

There are many instances in the book where I particularly felt connected to little Anne. Like the one where she does a recital at a hotel concert. Although she has gone up on stage several times before, this is the time she gets a taste of stage fright; and a terrible one at that. The same thing happened to me during a poetry recital competition in high school. I’ve performed on stage since the age of four and never did I find the stage as intimidating as I did on that day. There’s this other situation where she has to go far from Avonlea for some time. While her friends don’t miss home as much, Anne is terribly homesick. I could imagine how Anne felt. I’ve always wondered how people can move out of a place where they’ve spent their entire childhood and not feel even a pinch of sorrow.

Whether it is the world of imagination that she loves to weave, or the experience of growing up as a lone child, or the beautiful moments of daydreaming, or her fondness for nature, Anne is me; through and through. As I read through the chapters learning about her chattering nature as a kid that grew quieter during adolescence, or the special attachment to that one “bosom friend”, the popularity at school, and the awe and respect she had for her teachers, I saw myself in her. But what astonished me most is the quirk to rename people or things or places whose original name she didn’t like! I never thought I’d find that childhood quirk of mine in a book.

Anne of Green Gables Book

Do you know that feeling you get after reading a good book; that feeling of reassurance that life is good, and that everything will turn out just fine? Well, after reading this book, I felt that a well-written fictional book serves that purpose better than its accomplice from the self-help section. Anne of Green Gables was heart-warming beyond words for me. There’s this unsettling feeling that usually creeps in when something dear to your heart comes to an end. I generally feel that when I am moving on from some person or place or phase of my life where I have been attached for a long time. Though I read this book in a week, when it ended, it made me feel the same in that short span of time.

I grew so close to Anne and her friendships and her rivalries, her school, Avonlea, and her dear little Green Gables and its inhabitants, that I couldn’t control my tears when I finished reading the last chapter. That’s what books do. They give you the freedom to live inside its fictional world even when you’re aware that you’re only a reader who exists outside. And although your existence inside that fictional world is imaginary and temporary, you end up cherishing that experience for a lifetime.

Anne of Green Gables is the journey of a little orphan girl’s life over a span of seven years. There are joys and sorrows, ups and downs, accidents and blessings, on this route. And each of them strikes a chord in you when you read them. One other book from fiction that I felt this affectionate to, is the Harry Potter series. While Rowling explores seven years of Harry’s life through seven books, Montgomery succeeds in doing that of Anne in one single book.

The book is more than just a story for kids. It teaches some of life’s raw truths like, it is possible to happily move on from people whom you once considered inseparable from, or that failure doesn’t make you any less perfect, or that it is possible to outgrow your hatred for someone and become good friends. But the best lesson that I took home from this book is, ambition and gentle can go hand in hand.

Anne of Green Gables happened to me when I most needed it. This little novel written in 1908 has lavishly painted over my grey existence, a hundred and thirteen years later! That’s why they say that you shouldn’t underestimate the power of a good book. For it can defy time and space to deliver its purpose. Oh, how grateful am I that I undertook the reading challenge!

“It’s been my experience that you can nearly always enjoy things if you make up your mind firmly that you will.”

“For we pay a price for everything we get or take in this world; and although ambitions are well worth having, they are not to be cheaply won, but exact their dues of work and self-denial, anxiety and discouragement.”

“Next to trying and winning, the best thing is trying and failing.”

“‘We are rich,’ said Anne staunchly. ‘Why, we have sixteen years to our credit, and we’re happy as queens, and we’ve all got imaginations, more or less.’”

“… the worst of imagining things is that the time comes when you have to stop and that hurts.”

“It would be worth while to win, but she no longer thought life would be insupportable if she did not.”

“She had looked her duty courageously in the face and found it a friend – as duty ever is when we meet it frankly.”

“‘Dear old world,’ she murmured, ‘you are very lovely, and I am glad to be alive in you.’”

There are just so many things that it is hard to list out all of them. But here are a few that deserve to be mentioned:

  • As I said earlier, the character of Anne Shirley is more or less what I was as a child. And you naturally grow fond of someone who is much like you, whether in real life or in fiction.
  • The book is the first in a series of eight books, and this first one is particularly categorized as a children’s novel. However, there are numerous enlightening lessons about life that you get to learn as the chapters progress. And I feel, these lessons serve you well when you have a little more maturity than that of a teenager. So, I don’t regret that I got to read this book in my twenties.  
  • This book is a refreshing addition to your bookshelf. I’ve not come across many books that promise great company while battling loneliness or depression. But I can assure you, this book fulfills that.
  • Anne of Green Gables is an excellent book for anyone looking to sharpen their vocabulary in English. Like always, I sat with a notepad and a dictionary while reading, and I learnt about 80+ new words by the end. I am heartily obliged.
  • Any aspiring writers in the house? Well, this book might have something useful for you guys. This is because, the author presents one of the best examples of how to use description in writing, through this book.
  • I appreciate it where there’s closure, whether in life or in literature. And Anne of Green Gables didn’t fail me there.
  • All the characters from the book leave an impact on you in some manner. Whether it’s Marilla or Matthew, or Diana or Gilbert Blythe, you’ll grow to adore each of them as you keep reading.
  • If you are writing a series, you ought to know how to implant in the reader a curiosity to read the next instalment. And I’m glad Montgomery succeeded with flying colors in that context. I can’t wait to get my hands on the second book of the Anne of Green Gables series.

There is nothing that I did not like about Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery. I just felt that the book shouldn’t be categorized as children’s fiction. This book is suitable and enjoyable for all ages alike. It is one of the best works of fiction that I have ever read.

Anne of Green Gables by LM Montgomery is a fictional novel set in the late 1800s in Prince Edward Island in Canada. This classic book is considered a children’s novel, although suited for readers of all ages. The book is the epitome of a descriptive style of writing. You cannot help but marvel at the description of several settings in the book. The author also uses narrative style while unfolding the story. It is a classic combination of both these styles used in writing. The book uses third-person omniscient narration, like most fictional books. The author herself is the narrator and she narrates the story with mixed perspectives of all the characters.

L.M. Montgomery or Lucy Maud Montgomery was a Canadian best-selling author born in 1874. She is best known for the Anne of Green Gables series. The book is set in Prince Edward Island where Montgomery herself grew up, and the titular character of Anne Shirley is also believed to have been somewhat inspired by her own life. Some of L.M. Montgomery works include:

  • Anne of Green Gables series, that consists of eight novels
  • The Blythes are quoted
  • Emily trilogy
  • The Story Girl
  • The Golden Road
  • Pat of Silver Bush series, that consists of two novels
  • The Blue Castle
  • A Tangled Web
  • Kilmeny of the Orchard
  • Jane of Lantern Hill
  • Magic for Marigold

Lucy Maud Montgomery

I personally feel much obliged to L.M. Montgomery for creating Anne Shirley. Although she never knew me because we exist a century apart, she left here a gift for me, a gift so special that I’ll treasure it for the rest of my life. That’s one funny thing about books. If well-written, they leave an impact for even centuries after the author has left the earth. Rather, they live through the legacy of their books.

I would also like to say that I have immense respect for writers from the past. They didn’t have the internet to help them with every other doubt on vocabulary and grammar. And yet, they produced real, precious gems! They were the ones who possessed the true talent while we are dependent on Google for most of our work. If up until now I wanted to be a writer, today on, I want to be a writer like those geniuses of the past.

I doubt if it is sensible to judge the beauty and wonder of Anne of Green Gables with a number. Still, since it seems necessary, I would rate the book with a 9.5/10.

Anne of Green Gables is available online. Although bookstores have started operating again and there’s no feeling that can match the ecstasy after walking into one, we recommend that you stay safe as the pandemic threat has not yet been completely resolved. So, we are adding a website link below that will help you get the book online:

Like I said earlier, Anne of Green Gables is not just for kids. It is for anyone who has been through rough times in life. It is for anyone who believes that good things are on the way no matter what life has put them through. It’s for everyone who believes that imagination is the rarest of gifts. Anne Shirley has a way of making you like her despite all her quirks, and when you finish the book, you’ll go to bed with a new friend to look up to. Anne of Green Gables taught me that life can be colorful again no matter how horrible it has been. And if you have faith, you will run into people who will nourish your strengths and be genuinely happy for you. I am sure it will enrich you too in some way or the other. I wish you a happy and fulfilling reading experience.

Note-Our writer Anjali Kesavan has taken 52 weeks Reading challenge, so we will be publishing book reviews for all the readers out there! -Team Godofsmallthing. You can also check out some more book recommendations from our end like and hey! Each link will open in a new tab so you don’t have to miss out on reading this review 🙂 If you want to read some more book reviews! Head over to our book review section and explore lists of fiction, non-fiction, dystopian,   and other recommendations.  Book Reviews by Godofsmallthing

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book report on anne of green gables

Anne of Green Gables Books In Order

Publication order of anne shirley books, chronological order of anne shirley books.

Anne of Green Gables is the first and most popular novel in a nine book series written by Canadian author L.M. Montgomery (also known as Lucy Maud Montgomery). The series centers around the main character, Anne Shirley, a strong-willed, and imaginative orphan girl. Anne’s world is forever changed when she is adopted by Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert, a brother and sister who in their old age are looking for someone to assist them. Matthew and Marilla, especially Marilla, had anticipated for a young boy to be sent to them, but instead they are surprised and are given Anne. Anne’s talkative and emotional personality immediately wins over shy and reticent Matthew, but it takes a little longer for Marilla to warm up to her. Marilla begins to see similar characteristics in Anne that remind her of herself, and realizes that she must guide Anne as she thrives in the way of life, and also make sure that Anne does not make the same mistakes that she had. Anne has a unrealistically romantic outlook of life, and is particularly sensitive of her outward appearance, especially her red hair, which any ridicule of it ignites Anne’s temper getting her into troublesome situations. Although Marilla may appear stern and unfeeling towards Anne, Anne knows that Marilla truly loves her and only wants the best for her. Marilla sees the potential in Anne, and her insight propels Anne to become the strong woman readers see in the latter novels.

Set primarily in the idyllic backdrop of Prince Edward Island, readers can get a feel of small town settings and dynamics, both positive and negative – the relaxed pace of life, the immense sense of camaraderie, and also how quickly talk spreads around the neighborhood. Anne’s actions are especially noticed by the town gossip, Rachel Lynde, who is always eager to let Marilla know what she thinks of Anne’s latest antics, and Anne is not a fan of Rachel and has no problem in letting her know it. Marilla, on the other hand, is a sensible and discerning woman, and does not let Rachel’s tattle telling get in the way of her of raising Anne, or in the way of her and Anne’s growing relationship.

Anne Shirley’s bold and out of ordinary behavior tends to land her in trouble, and it also catches the attention of of her classmate, Gilbert Blythe. Although, Anne starts off with a negative impression of Gilbert ever since he makes fun of her hair color, she eventually begins to see him in a different light. He on the other hand is smitten with her immediately and relentlessly pursues her, even a one point saving her from drowning. As their further schooling separates them and takes them to different locations, Gilbert’s act of selflessness of giving up his preferred school to teach at so that Anne can be closer to Marilla, eventually wins Anne over. Their friendship continues to grow, but even though Gilbert makes his love for Anne very apparent, Anne rebuffs him due to her own insecurities and far-fetched fantasies of romance and “true love”. It is not until the third novel, Anne of the Island, when Gilbert suddenly becomes deathly ill with typhoid fever, that Anne realizes how she has been wrong all along, and that her heart has always belonged to Gilbert, and his death would change the course of her life forever. Gilbert eventually pulls through, and he and Anne become engaged, and their life events together are further detailed in the rest of the novels in the series.

Another impressionable relationship in Anne Shirley’s world is her deep bond and friendship with Diana Barry, which adds a sweet glimpse of childhood friendship that lasts. Diana is the opposite of what Anne Shirley thinks of herself; Diana is beautiful, but not as intelligent. It is the perfect example of opposites attract. Anne’s unusual behavior, such as unintentionally getting Diana drunk to accidentally selling her neighbor’s cow, does not drive Diana away, but instead reinforces their friendship. Although tragedies do occur throughout the novel series, such as the sudden passing of Matthew Cuthbert and also Rachel Lynde’s husband, relationships all over remain strong as the characters understand that they need each other even more in times of trouble and sorrow. Forgiveness, loyalty, and perseverance are resonating and significant themes that live on in the Anne of Green Gables series.

While the first novel, Anne of Green Gables, more focuses on character introduction and how relationships are being formed, the second novel, Anne of Avonlea, really begins to show how Anne progresses and matures into a intelligent and caring young lady. As she eventually becomes a teacher, she is forced to grow and take responsibility of herself, but also be responsible for those that she teaches. This is much different then how she was when she first arrived to Avonlea, and readers can really begin to see her transformation.

The Anne of Green Gables series has always been an immensely well liked series, not only in the book form, but in film versions as well. It has been made into movie adaptions, television series, and even stage productions. The undisputed and most famous adaption is the Canadian television miniseries that first debuted in 1985. Although the miniseries only details the first few novels in the series, it still gives its audience a decent story line of the written work themselves.

L.M. Montgomery captured her life experiences from teaching in various schools on Prince Edward Island and successfully managed to display that way of life in the Anne of Green Gables series. The series gives readers a chance to escape and seek out a different place, a place that still resembles real life, but through the perspective of a young girl who starts off alone, but ends up being one of the most loved characters of all time. L.M. Montgomery’s literary works continue to be adored by old and new fans all around the world as they immerse themselves in the simple and yet, never dull world of Anne Shirley.

4 Responses to “Anne of Green Gables”

I don’t know what the anne of green gables order is can you tell me

The list is above in both publication and chronological order.

Where can I get the whole series of Anne Of Green Gables

you could probably find them anywhere that sells books.

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Book Series Recaps and Reviews

Book Series Recaps

So what happened in book one.

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Review of Anne of Green Gables

book report on anne of green gables

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review of Anne of Green Gables

No spoilers in this review of Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery .

Special thanks to Sarina Byron, a BSR contributor who wrote this great review! Sarina is a British Author and Contributing Writer living in California. Sarina enjoys bringing forth a different perspective and encouraging a different way of thinking through her writing. Visit her blog to read her reviews, and check the end of the review for a link to her Instagram.

I think of classics as the books that present life as real as it was at the time. They present real fears, disappointments, humiliations, and regret. We try to protect children from all sorts of uncomfortable emotions nowadays, and I have to say I admire the classics for not doing that. They offer a safe, fictional space where children meet characters who appear to be a lot like them but have experiences unimaginable to them. Classics like Anne of Green Gables provide a safe environment to explore drastically different lives lived by those the likes of whom we may never come across.

If you don’t subscribe to the above, that’s okay. You may be more comfortable with the idea that books like Green Gables project a world where children are not patronized. They are taught good values and manners, but when they offer some valuable insight, it is not only accepted but appreciated. Green Gables is full of morals not only for children but for adults, too. As the author masterfully weaves into the story, “ All great things are wound up with all little things .”

Green Gables is largely autobiographical, and that may well be the reason for its raging success. Anyone can take a shot at writing a children’s story, but to be able to show life from a child’s point of view is aspirational. At various points in the book, you may find yourself reminiscing how you had similar views of matters and marveling at Lucy Montgomery’s ability to channel her inner child so well. Perhaps she kept detailed diaries of her thoughts and experiences as she did of her adulthood. Perhaps she kept the child in her alive for much longer than most of us can.

The innocence of Anne Shirley is palpable as is the wisdom. Simple things like wanting a different name for oneself, hoping to have a bosom friend dearer than life itself, and deriving genuine satisfaction from finding kindred spirits in adults as well. Anne wanted to be called Cordelia instead, and I might struggle to find at least one adult who didn’t wish they had a different name when they were children. That much desired name just popped into your head as you read this, didn’t it?

Anne’s yearning for a bosom friend was so strong nothing could match her joy of having found Diana. As someone who had her fair share of moving around as a child, I could relate to the anticipation of meeting a new friend who would become a constant companion. But this anticipation holds higher stakes when one has never had a family. Anne had only ever known the life of an orphan, and at the time this book was written, that tag didn’t carry much respect. For no fault of yours, you were seen as undesirable, and people were more unforgiving of your faults than of other little children’s.

The chapters themselves may not strike you as unusual, but everything changes when you consider how many complex emotions Montgomery handles within them. Everything must have the simplicity of a child yet the extreme anxiety of a child who has never known love. Montgomery was without parents—but not without family—but her touching portrayal of Anne and Diana’s friendship begs the question of how similar Anne’s experience was to her own.

The portion of the story I identified with the most was finding kindred spirits in adults. My parents mercifully did not treat me like a child—more like an adult-in-the-making—so this was the most relatable aspect of Anne’s life for me. If you had parents who were focused on raising an adult and not a child, you might find a ‘kindred spirit,’ as Anne calls them, in this idea itself.

Green Gables is childhood encapsulated in 38 chapters. It’s filled with dreams of growing up, errors to learn from, and experiments in who one wants to be. Regret and ego loom large in Anne’s relationship with Gilbert Blythe, mirroring many times in all of our lives when we shunned friendships pretending to be offended when we actually wanted to burst and loudly declare what we wanted instead. This delicate balance of confidence and mortification dominates childhood, after all this is a time when we fall, stumble, grow unevenly, and don’t know what to do with our perpetually flourishing proportions.

This book is an excellent reminder of the love of simple things. More than once, Anne feels glad to be alive in a world where there are so many things to like, lucky to be alive in a world that has autumns and white frosts. I have yet to read the rest of Montgomery’s books, but just the mention of these simple joys indicates Montgomery had not yet succumbed to the debilitating depression that ran alongside her life like a stream. Maybe her mirth ran out when she finished the Anne series, or maybe it was halfway through the other books instead. I suppose I’ll have to read them to try to guess when Montgomery’s supply of joy began to run short. What we do know is it wasn’t during Anne of Green Gables . How could it be really, when being inside Anne’s head is like living in perpetual sunshine?

As Montgomery herself wrote, “ Excitement hung around Anne like garments .”

Let us know what you think about this review of Anne of Green Gables and Sarina’s great review in the comments! No spoilers on this page, please!

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  • Study Guides
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Anne of Greene Gables

Mind Map Gallery Anne of Green Gables Book Summary

Anne of Green Gables Book Summary

Lucy Maud Montgomery's children's novel Anne of Green Gables was first published in 1908. The work, a melancholy yet endearing coming-of-age tale about a feisty and eccentric orphan girl who finds a home with aging siblings, became a children's classic and spawned multiple sequels. Matthew Cuthbert lives in Avonlea, Prince Edward Island, with his sister Marilla. They apply to adopt a boy from an orphanage because they need help on their farm, Green Gables. Anne Shirley, a red-haired, freckle-faced 11-year-old girl, is sent to the siblings by mistake. While Matthew is smitten with Anne right away, Marilla is undecided about retaining her. Anne, on the other hand, gradually alters the miserable lives of the bashful Matthew and prim Marilla, and they grow to regard her as a daughter. Anne has two nemeses: Mrs. Rachel Lynde, who she eventually wins over, and Gilbert Blythe, a classmate who insults Anne by calling her "carrots"—she is self-conscious about her appearance, particularly her red hair—and starts a long-running feud. Anne is impulsive and mischievous, and she has many disasters, such as coloring her hair green by accident. However, she matures during the novel, and after Matthew's death, Anne foregoes college in order to care for Marilla, who is losing her sight. Anne, however, enthusiastically welcomes her new circumstance.

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Anne of Green Gables

Determination & Imagination Build a Home

Anne Shirley, an 11-year-old orphan, is mistakenly sent to the home of an elderly brother and sister planning to adopt a boy. After a rocky start, Anne wins them over and grows into a bright, talented young woman who must make a difficult sacrifice to save the home she loves.

Importance of Restraint

When Anne's behavior gets her into trouble, she learns to moderate herself.

Looks Matter

Anne's appearance makes a difference in how she feels and how others see her

Authentic Self

Others may find her odd, but Anne speaks and acts in ways that feel right to her.

Main Characters

Anne Shirley

Passionate, dreamy orphan; finds a home with adoptive parents Marilla and Matthew

Marilla Cuthbert

Stern, reserved spinster who becomes Anne's mother; develops a deep love for Anne

Matthew Cuthbert

Shy, sweet, kind brother of Marilla; farmer who offers Anne the understanding she needs

Diana Barry

Anne's loyal best friend; kindred spirit even when Anne gets her into trouble

L.M. MONTGOMERY

Motherless and with a faraway father, Montgomery grew up feeling as abandoned as her heroine Anne Shirley. She shared Anne's fierce commitment to education and her love for Prince Edward Island, but as the Anne series progressed, she gave her heroine the happy, fulfilled adulthood she herself would never see.

Canadian Nationalism

Many Canadian writers in the 1800s produced works set in Canada.

Home Children

From 1869 to 1932 more than 100,000 homeless children joined Canadian families.

Prejudice against redheads

Anne shares in the discrimination faced by redheads for centuries.

Confessions of a Homeschooler

Anne of Green Gables Unit Study & Lapbook

Anne of Green Gables Unit Study & Lapbook

Hi everyone! I have a new literature unit to add to our collection! Today I’m sharing my new Anne of Green Gables Unit Study and Lapbook. Hope you enjoy!

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Story Summary:

Anne is a sweet, imaginative, and charismatic young orphan girl who is unexpectedly adopted by a family in Green Gables. The story follows Anne as she experiences the pains and joys of becoming part of a family. And her life growing up in the remote Canadian village of Avonlea.

This accompanying unit study is meant to be used with the Classic Starts Anne of Green Gables version as retold from the Lucy Maud Montgomery original. The Classic Start versions are find them a little easier for younger readers, but you could certainly use this unit study with the original version if you have an older student. The lapbook chapters will correlate with the Classic Starts edition, but the concepts are the same, so you should be able to complete the units using any version you choose.

Watch my Anne of Green Gables Lapbook Video to see more information:

What ages are these units for?

I normally recommend my literature units for elementary level readers grades 1-5. You can assign them out individually to your student so they read on their own, then complete the mini-book assignment for each chapter. There are writing assignments for each chapter as your students answer comprehension questions from the reading. So you’ll just want to make sure they’re comfortable writing.

Or you can read it together as a group if you have younger readers, then have them complete the mini-book assignments when you’re done with each chapter.

How long does the literature unit take?

That really depends on your child’s reading speed, and how many chapters there are in the book! And how fast your child reads through the chapters as well.

Each one varies in length, and you can easily modify these units to fit your schedule. So for example, you can assign one chapter per day plus the associated mini-book assignments, or you can have them do 2-3/week. It’s totally up to you, your schedule, and your student.

What’s included in the Unit Study?

Each unit includes everything you need to complete the Anne of Green Gables lapbook with the exception of the book itself and the file folders.

The download includes a teacher’s manual with the daily reading assignments, along with the comprehension questions and answers for each chapter. This makes it much easier for you to help your students even if you haven’t read the book yourself!

There is also one mini-book for each chapter in the book. Inside your student will answer a comprehension question that relates directly to the chapter they’ve just read. Some assignments include vocabulary words, mapping the voyage, and completing the mini-reports.

Extras for older students:

This unit includes also 5 reports that your students can complete. If you have older readers, have them do these reports to make the unit a bit more challenging. If you have younger readers, you might prefer to ask the questions verbally so they aren’t having to write a report.

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The reports include:

  • Story Facts (Setting, Main Plot, Main Characters)
  • Protagonist vs. Antagonist
  • Prediction Sheet
  • My Book Report
  • Book vs. Movie
  • Storyboard timeline

As you read through the book, each chapter has a mini-book with comprehension questions for your student to complete.

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This unit has 25 mini-books including a vocabulary mini-book full of terms to learn throughout the story.

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Then on the backside of the lapbook, I added a pocket to the backside where you can store the reports and story timeline.

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Get your copy today and start learning with classic literature! 

Looking for more unit studies? Check out these links!

  • My Literature Lapbooks
  • My Science & Inventor Lapbooks
  • Famous Artists Lapbook & Unit Study
  • Famous Composers Lapbook & Unit Study

For more lapbook tutorials:

  • Tri-Fold Lapbook Tutorial
  • How To Lapbook Tutorials

Of course you know I love to give back to my readers, so I’m offering 1 of these units free for one of you! Enter below!

Will you be compiling the recent literature studies that you’ve done into one set, like you have with the original classic literature studies? Thanks for all you do!

When I was younger, Anne of Green Gables was my favorite set of books. I loved the story line. Thank you for sharing. Have a great day!!!

Daniel Defoe is not the original author! These books are my all time favorite. I reread the entire series every few years! 🙂

Thanks for letting me know about the typo! I’ve written so many of these now I’m getting them mixed up! LOL!

Oh my! How awesome! I LOVE Anne of Green Gables! We have several different versions of the book and the complete set of movies. I would love to use this lapbook study with my daughter. We are currently working through your Black Beauty one and she’s having so much fun. Thank you for the opportunity to win this! Are you currently working on another literature lapbook set?

Hi Tracey, yes I’ll put the new units all together in a set once they’re completed! :o)

This looks great! Anne of Green Gables is one of my all time favorite books. When I click on the ‘Buy Now’ button it takes me to a page to buy 20,000 Leagues. Can you somehow let me know when it is fixed so I can purchase the correct unit? Thanks, KC

THANK YOU! I love this book and am excited to share my love of it with my 4 little girls. Along with this Unit Study I think they’ll love it even more and always remember it. Thank you again, you’re the best!

I teach in a homeschool co-op, 7-9 year olds. I would LOVE to use your Anne of GG lapbook, but I am not doing any of the other books in the CLASSROOM edition, and don’t have much budget. Is there a way I can get just Anne of GG permission without purchasing the whole thing?

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book report on anne of green gables

Study Like a Boss

Anne of Green Gables – Book Report

The book I chose for my book report is Anne of Green Gables. It is written by L. M Montgomery. I really liked this book. This book is a fiction book. It was funny in some parts. Anne is a really funny character and I liked reading about what she would do next.

The main characters are Anne Shirley, Marilla, Matthew, Diana, and Gilbert. Anne is an orphan who has a wild imagination and loves to talk. She has red hair and freckles She is adopted by Matthew and Marilla. Matthew is a shy, old man and is very kind. His sister is Marilla. Marilla is very protective of Anne. She loves her very much, but doesn’t want to tell her. Diana is a very pretty young girl who is Anne’s best friend. Gilbert is a boy whom all the girls like, except for Anne. He gets on her nerves all of the time.

The story takes place on Prince Edward Island in Canada. It also takes place in the town of Avonlea. The home that Anne, Matthew, and Marilla is called Green Gables.

The story begins when Matthew and Marilla want to adopt a boy. Instead, when Matthew goes to Carmody to get him, he finds that there is a girl instead. Her name is Anne Shirley.

He takes her anyway and Marilla gets mad. She tries to give her to someone else, but they don’t like her so Marilla decides to keep her. Anne met Diana one day. They become best friends. One the first day of school, Anne met Gilbert Blythe. He made Anne so mad by calling her carrots she hit him over the head with her slate and broke it. She never forgave him for saying that about her. One day Anne has Dianna over to her house and Diana drinks raspberry cordial and gets drunk. Anne gets in trouble and she can’t see Diana anymore. She couldn’t talk to her. A while later, Anne is at her home when she sees Diana running towards the door. She says that her sister is sick and Anne goes to Diana’s house and helps get her sister better. Matthew called the doctor. After that, Anne was allowed to see Diana again. Diana had a birthday party and the girls started to play truth or dare.

Anne got a dare to walk across the roof. She fell and broke her ankle and had to moss the first part of school. When Anne went back to school there was a new teacher who let them put on a concert of singing, acting, and music. One day, Anne tried to dye her hair black, but instead dyed it green. She had to cut her hair really short. Anne got into Queens and also tied with Gilbert Blythe to get the Avery scholarship. Anne came home that summer and decided not to go back to Queens because Marilla’s eyesight was getting worse. She got a job to teach at a school in White Sands. She meets Gilbert one day on her way home to Green Gables. She finally forgives him for calling her carrots. They walked back to Green Gables together.

I really liked this book. It was really good and I enjoyed reading it. I always was up for what Anne might do next. I would recommend it to anyone.

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Anne of Green Gables

Publisher description.

With centuries of literature, it's inevitable that some will fall through the cracks. We hunt down public domain works and restore them so they're not lost to the world. Who are we? We're Cairn Press. Our background is in design, publishing, typography, and technology. These skills fuel our mission to create the highest quality Public Domain eBooks available online, at an affordable price. We give them the treatment they deserve; our proprietary process restores books for a better overall user experience in design, readability, and e-reader compatibility. Discover a piece of history with this digital edition eBook of Anne of Green Gables, by L. M. Montgomery, M. A. Claus, and William A. J. Claus. Restored with care and true to the original work, this work has been deemed culturally important by scholars and is a fundamental part of our civilization's knowledge base. Pick up your copy today. Genres: Orphans, Islands, Friendship, Bildungsromans, Girls, Country life – Prince Edward Island, Prince Edward Island – History – 20th century, Canada – History – 1867-1914, Shirley, Anne (Fictitious character)

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  4. Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montomery Vintage Paperback

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VIDEO

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COMMENTS

  1. Anne of Green Gables: Full Book Summary

    After five years of rivalry, Gilbert and Anne forge a close friendship. Though her future path has narrowed considerably, Anne remains eternally optimistic and thinks cheerfully about her future. A short summary of L. M. Montgomery's Anne of Green Gables. This free synopsis covers all the crucial plot points of Anne of Green Gables.

  2. Anne of Green Gables Summary

    Anne of Green Gables. Author: L.M. Montgomery. "Anne of Green Gables" was published in 1908 by L. M. Montgomery. Although she wrote it for all ages, since the mid-twentieth century it has been known as a children's book. The story follows the life of an eleven-year-old orphan girl who is adopted into the family of an elderly brother and sister.

  3. Anne of Green Gables Summary

    Anne of Green Gables is the story of a young orphan girl, Anne, who is mistakenly delivered to an older couple looking to adopt a boy to work on their farm in Avonlea on Prince Edward Island. After the couple meets Anne, they decide to keep her. Anne soon makes her home on the farm (called Green Gables), and her spirited nature charms the couple, who begin to see her as a daughter.

  4. Anne of Green Gables

    Anne of Green Gables was inspired by a newspaper story, and Montgomery infused the work with her own girlhood experiences and the rural life and traditions of Prince Edward Island. Although initially rejected by several publishers, the novel was a huge success upon publication. Mark Twain called Anne "the most lovable child in fiction" since Lewis Carroll's Alice.

  5. Anne Of Green Gables Summary and Study Guide

    Anne of Green Gables is a world-renowned classic children's novel first published in 1908 by Canadian author L. M. Montgomery. Set in the latter part of the 19th century in fictional Avonlea, a small town on Prince Edward Island, Canada, the story follows the accidental arrival of a precocious 11-year-old orphan girl, Anne Shirley, at Green Gables, the family homestead of middle-aged ...

  6. Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

    Book Summary: Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery. This heartwarming story has beckoned generations of readers into the special world of Green Gables, an old-fashioned farm outside a town called Avonlea. Anne Shirley, an eleven-year-old orphan, has arrived in this verdant corner of Prince Edward Island only to discover that the Cuthberts ...

  7. Anne of Green Gables

    Anne of Green Gables is a 1908 novel by Canadian author Lucy Maud Montgomery (published as L. M. Montgomery). Written for all ages, it has been considered a classic children's novel since the mid-20th century. Set in the late 19th century, the novel recounts the adventures of 11-year-old orphan girl Anne Shirley sent by mistake to two middle-aged siblings, Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert, who had ...

  8. Anne of Green Gables: Study Guide

    Overview. Anne of Green Gables, published in 1908, is a novel by Canadian author Lucy Maud Montgomery. It tells the story of Anne Shirley, an imaginative and talkative orphan who is mistakenly sent to live with middle-aged siblings Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert on their farm in Avonlea, Prince Edward Island. The novel follows Anne as she grows ...

  9. Anne of Green Gables Study Guide

    Anne of Green Gables is the first of 11 books featuring Anne; it's followed by Anne of Avonlea (1909), Chronicles of Avonlea (1912), and Anne of the Island (1915); the last of the series is Anne of Ingleside (1939). Montgomery's Emily of New Moon (1923) and its sequels are also well known; she wrote many other novels and hundreds of short ...

  10. Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery Plot Summary

    Anne of Green Gables Summary. One June day in Avonlea, Prince Edward Island, Mrs. Rachel Lynde notices her reclusive neighbor, Matthew Cuthbert, driving off in his buggy. Curious, she goes to visit her friend, Matthew's sister Marilla, who lives with him on Green Gables farm.

  11. Anne of Green Gables

    Lucy Maud Montgomery was a Canadian author, best known for a series of novels beginning with Anne of Green Gables, published in 1908. Montgomery was born at Clifton, Prince Edward Island, Nov. 30, 1874. She came to live at Leaskdale, north of Uxbridge Ontario, after her wedding with Rev. Ewen Macdonald on July 11, 1911.

  12. Book Review: Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery

    Between 1909 and 1939, Lucy Maud Montgomery wrote seven books about an imaginative, talkative, high-spirited heroine named Anne Shirley, beginning with this one. Set in the tiny years of the 20th century, in the tiny Canadian province of Prince Edward Island, on a farm near the (fictitious) tiny town of Avonlea, Anne of Green Gables is the most ...

  13. Anne of Green Gables Book Review

    Positive Messages. The book celebrates imagination, creativity, frien. Positive Role Models. Anne is the poster girl for learning from your mis. Violence & Scariness. A few episodes find Anne lashing out in anger or s. Sex, Romance & Nudity. Very mild flirting between some characters, and ta. Language Not present.

  14. Anne of Green Gables Books in Order: Full Guide with PDF

    5. Anne's House of Dreams (1917) "I couldn't live where there were no trees-something vital in me would starve.". Anne's House of Dreams is the pivotal story in which Anne marries Gilbert Blythe, now a doctor, in the old orchard of Green Gables. Together, they move to their dream house on the shores of Four Winds.

  15. Anne of Green Gables books in order

    8. Rilla of Ingleside. The eighth of the Anne of Green Gables books in order brings us to the end of the series. In this final book, Anne's children are mostly grown up except for Rilla. Rilla is high-spirited, pretty and looking forward to her first dance and hopefully her first kiss.

  16. Anne of Green Gables

    Anne of Green Gables Summary. Anne of Green Gables is set in the late 1800s in Avonlea, a fictional village on Prince Edward Island in Canada. Anne Shirley is an 11-year-old orphan who has never known a loving and stable family. She has grown up in foster homes that treated more as a servant than a daughter.

  17. Book Review: Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery

    Anne Shirley is a lonely red-haired orphan who is sent to live with a brother and sister, Mathew and Marilla, at Green Gables in the fictional town of Avonlea. They wanted a boy to help on their farm, but the orphanage sent a girl instead. Anne eventually works her way into the hearts of Marilla, Mathew, and all of the citizens of Avonlea.

  18. Anne of Green Gables Book Review: A reading delight for anyone who has

    Genre, style and narrative of the book, Anne of Green Gables. Anne of Green Gables by LM Montgomery is a fictional novel set in the late 1800s in Prince Edward Island in Canada. This classic book is considered a children's novel, although suited for readers of all ages. The book is the epitome of a descriptive style of writing.

  19. Anne of Green Gables

    Description / Buy at Amazon. Anne of Green Gables is the first and most popular novel in a nine book series written by Canadian author L.M. Montgomery (also known as Lucy Maud Montgomery). The series centers around the main character, Anne Shirley, a strong-willed, and imaginative orphan girl. Anne's world is forever changed when she is ...

  20. Review of Anne of Green Gables

    Green Gables is childhood encapsulated in 38 chapters. It's filled with dreams of growing up, errors to learn from, and experiments in who one wants to be. Regret and ego loom large in Anne's relationship with Gilbert Blythe, mirroring many times in all of our lives when we shunned friendships pretending to be offended when we actually ...

  21. Anne of Greene Gables (pdf)

    Uploaded by AmbassadorCobraPerson185 on coursehero.com. English document from Belhaven University, 2 pages, NOVEL STUDY Anne of Green Gables: Discussion Guide #3 Page 1 Encourage critical thinking and support your students' literacy development by asking questions during reading. Here are some questions you can ask your readers to engage them ...

  22. Anne of Green Gables Book Summary

    Release time:2022-08-23. Lucy Maud Montgomery's children's novel Anne of Green Gables was first published in 1908. The work, a melancholy yet endearing coming-of-age tale about a feisty and eccentric orphan girl who finds a home with aging siblings, became a children's classic and spawned multiple sequels. Matthew Cuthbert lives in Avonlea ...

  23. Anne of Green Gables Unit Study & Lapbook

    Anne is a sweet, imaginative, and charismatic young orphan girl who is unexpectedly adopted by a family in Green Gables. The story follows Anne as she experiences the pains and joys of becoming part of a family. And her life growing up in the remote Canadian village of Avonlea. This accompanying unit study is meant to be used with the Classic ...

  24. Anne of Green Gables

    The book I chose for my book report is Anne of Green Gables. It is written by L. M Montgomery. I really liked this book. This book is a fiction book. It was funny in some parts. Anne is a really funny character and I liked reading about what she would do next.

  25. ‎Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery (ebook)

    Download and read the ebook version of Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery on Apple Books. With centuries of literature, it's inevitable that some will fall through the cr ‎Fiction & Literature · 2023