Wee Sir Gibbie of the Highlands (George Macdonald Classics for Young Readers)

by George MacDonald

Other authorsMichael R. Phillips (Editor)
Hardcover, 1990

Barcode

3845

Call number

823.8 MAC

Status

Available

Call number

823.8 MAC

Pages

239

Description

After the death of his titled but penniless father, a mute young boy in nineteenth-century Scotland finds himself a witness to a violent murder and flees the city in hopes of discovering a new life in the Highlands.

Publication

Bethany House Publishers (1990), 239 pages

ISBN

1556611390 / 9781556611391

Collection

Rating

½ (2 ratings; 3.5)

User reviews

LibraryThing member librisissimo
As with the editor, I picked up this book because C. S. Lewis cited MacDonald as his favorite author and mentor. While there are aspects of MacDonald's writing that one can see in Lewis's fiction (innocent but wise children, Christological symbology), MacDonald has "dated" in a way Lewis has not
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(yet, anyway).
This volume is a further abridged and edited version of an abridged and edited version of MacDonald's original (as the editor says, no one today is going to read a 400 page novel written in heavy Scots dialect).
I had hoped to give this to my grandchildren, but the story is an odd conjunction of inspirational characters(who would be far too "sweet" for today's youth but might pass muster with naïve younger children), and sordid situations of adult life (drunkenness, violence, class snobbery, hypocrisy) more suitable for juniors or teens - who would totally not accept the saccharinity.
For adults interested in MacDonald, the book is okay, but it is not going to be a big "draw" for young readers.
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