The fictional story written by the famous author Lucy Mode Montgomery is mainly in Canada's beautiful Prince Edward Island State. The story is about a red and orphan girl with a smooth and very thin, wild imagination. She went through all over the world to find a "spirit of spirit" and met "intimate" friends and school enemies. Let 's see Ann' s life in green gable Anne Anne. After her parents died hotly, Anne was taken to Mrs. Thomas as her parents were far away and her relatives did not live nearby.
The problem of changing Anne to Jane and Green Gables to Thornfield is that you can not read even if you read Anne of Green Gables. Because they are looking for anxiety and morbidity. Jane Eyre is an interesting book I have read and evaluated over and over, but if you want Jane Eyre, read Jane Eyre instead of Anne's Green Gable. Anne With E also lost the immortal sense which is an indispensable element of the classics by relentlessly repeating the date as a product of 2017. I would not see Anne erroneously dyed her hair green, but I got an episode about menstruation. That is one of the topics of the year. There is nothing special about the way menstruation is drawn or depicted in the adult story of a girl, but to be precise, I choose to put it in the mouth of Ann at the end of the 19th century years - Criticism of this problem allows viewers to see the situation within 15 years instead of going to Avonlea, but in 2017 they will be at the forefront of gender politics
Green Gables is the name of a 19th century farm in Cavendish on Prince Edward Island and is one of the most famous literary landmarks in Canada. The green gable farm and its surroundings are the background of the popular Anne of Green Gables novel by Lucy Mode Montgomery. This place is also known as Green Gable Heritage. This house was designated as a National Historic Site in 1985 and is located in Prince Edward Island National Park. International evaluation of Montgomery's novel has made Cavendish a popular tourist destination in the province since the beginning of the 20th century. It led to the establishment of Prince Edward Island National Park in the 1930 's. The park boundary includes Homestead of Green Gables which became property of the Canadian government.