Add to Book Shelf
Flag as Inappropriate
Email this Book

Mary Louise and the Liberty Girls

By Baum, L. Frank

Click here to view

Book Id: WPLBN0002954136
Format Type:
File Size: 123.78 MB
Reproduction Date: 2009

Title: Mary Louise and the Liberty Girls  
Author: Baum, L. Frank
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Fiction, Teen/Young adult, Mystery
Collections: Audio Books Collection, Mary Louise and the Liberty Girls
Historic
Publication Date:
1917
Publisher: LibriVox Audio Books

Citation

APA MLA Chicago

Frank Baum, B. L., & Dyne, E. V. (1917). Mary Louise and the Liberty Girls. Retrieved from http://www.self.gutenberg.org/


Description
The Bluebird Books is a series of novels popular with teenage girls in the 1910s and 1920s. The series was begun by L. Frank Baum using his Edith Van Dyne pseudonym, then continued by at least three others, all using the same pseudonym. Baum wrote the first four books in the series, possibly with help from his son, Harry Neal Baum, on the third. The books are concerned with adolescent girl detectives— a concept Baum had experimented with earlier, in The Daring Twins (1911) and Phoebe Daring (1912). The Bluebird series began with Mary Louise, originally written as a tribute to Baum's favorite sister, Mary Louise Baum Brewster. Baum's publisher, Reilly & Britton, rejected that manuscript, apparently judging the heroine too independent. Baum wrote a new version of the book; the original manuscript is lost. The title character is Mary Louise Burrows. In this, the fourth book of the series, Mary Louise and friends form a group dedicated to supporting the soldiers in World War I, and she brings Josie O'Gorman in to spoil a treasonous plot against the government. (Summary from Wikipedia and Sibella Denton)

Summary
Electronic recorded live performance of a reading

Excerpt
Teen/Young adult, Mystery

 
 



Copyright © World Library Foundation. All rights reserved. eBooks from Project Gutenberg are sponsored by the World Library Foundation,
a 501c(4) Member's Support Non-Profit Organization, and is NOT affiliated with any governmental agency or department.