The railway children

188 pages

English language

Published Nov. 11, 2000 by Dover.

ISBN:
978-0-486-41022-7
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
43186041

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4 stars (3 reviews)

When their father is sent away to prison, three London children move to the country where they keep busy preventing accidents on the nearby railway, making many new friends, and generally learning a good deal about themselves.

41 editions

reviewed Railway Children (Children's Library) by Edith Nesbit (Parragon Children's Library)

Middle of the (Rail)road Kid Lit

3 stars

This was a cozy-feeling book that was gentle and sweet, and the kids were all likeable, but it didn't get to the next level like Nesbit's Five Children books do. Maybe she just works better when there's magic involved.

Growing up with The Boxcar Children, I figured the kids would be orphans or live at a railyard or something, but they were just somewhat poor (but labor was cheap enough they still had domestic help) and lived near a railroad.

Whenever I think about 20th century Britain, the World Wars play a huge part, so it was interesting to read something written before then.

As many rescues as the kids did, I was surprised that their Dad being released happened basically totally offscreen.

It was funny that Phyllis's main character trait was being a screwup.

It got surprisingly meta at the end, considering the era and audience.

avatar for sculpin

rated it

4 stars
avatar for liambean

rated it

4 stars

Subjects

  • Family life -- Fiction
  • Brothers and sisters -- Fiction
  • Railroads -- Fiction
  • Country life -- England -- Fiction
  • England -- Fiction