I get on charmingly with the English nobility and sufficiently well with
the gentry, but the upper servants strike terror to my soul. There is
something awe-inspiring to me about an English butler. -from Chapter II
Penelope Hamilton is a young American lady, genteelly poor, abroad in
England with her friends Francesca, who is young and flighty, and
Salemina, a sophisticated gentlewoman. Together they explore the British
way of life, from the bustling Saturday-night street markets and the
polite fiction of privacy courting couples enjoy on park strolls to
elegant balls at which young ladies make their social debuts to the
cheery innkeepers who take the travelers under their wing. First
published in 1900, this is a long-forgotten classic from one of the most
beloved authors of young adult fiction... the kind that adults enjoy
even more than children do. Brew a pot of tea and settle in for a
delightful read. American author and educator KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN
(1856-1923) was born in Philadelphia. She started the first free
kindergarten in San Francisco in 1878 but is perhaps best known as the
author of Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1903).