Emily Starr never knew what it was to be lonely--until her beloved
father died. Now Emily's an orphan, and her snobbish relatives are
taking her to live with them at New Moon Farm. Although she's sure
she'll never be happy there, Emily deals with her stern aunt Elizabeth
and her malicious classmates by using her quick wit and holding her head
high.
Things slowly begin to change for the better when Emily makes some new
friends. There's Teddy Kent, who does marvelous drawings; Perry Miller,
the hired boy, who's sailed the world with his father yet has never been
to school; and above all, Ilse Burnley, a tomboy with a blazing temper.
With these wonderful companions at her side and adventures around every
corner, Emily begins to find her new home beautiful and fascinating--so
much so that she comes to think of herself as Emily of New Moon.
In this first volume of the celebrated Emily trilogy, Lucy Maud
Montgomery draws a more realistic portrait of a young orphan girl's life
on early twentieth-century Prince Edward Island.