Lucy Maud Montgomery- April is the anniversary of her death
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Lucy Maud Montgomery was born in Clifton, Prince Edward Island. When she was two, her mother died of tuberculosis. Her father, who was a merchant, remarried, and moved away. Montgomery was raised by her maternal grandparents in Cavendish. The place was isolated and her childhood was not particularly happy: she grew up in an atmosphere of strict discipline and punishment for the slightest reason.
At an early age Montgomery read widely. She started to write in school and had her first poem published in a local paper at the age of fifteen. In 1895 Montgomery qualified for a teacher’s licence at Prince Wales College, Charlottetown. During the 1890s she worked as a teacher.
In 1895-96 Montgomery studied literature at Dalhousie University, Halifax. She returned to Cavendish to take care of her grandmother and worked at a local post office.
In 1911 after her grandmother died, Montgomery married Ewan MacDonald, the Presbyterian minister and moved with him to rural Ontario.
While caring for her grandmother, she wrote the first book of the Anne series. It drew on her girlhood experiences. The idea was based on a notebook entry from 1904: “Elderly couple apply to orphan asylum for a boy. By mistake a girl is sent them.”
Anne of Green Gables was the story of a talkative, red-haired orphan, Anne Shirley.
Montgomery’s success was shadowed by a nine-year dispute with her publisher and her husband’s bouts of melancholy. In 1925 the family moved to Norval, near Toronto and then in 1935, after her husband’s retirement, to Toronto.
ANNE OF INGLESIDE (1939), the last volume in the Anne series, reflected Montgomery’s disappointments in life. During the late 1930s Montgomery suffered a breakdown and remained despondent until her death on April 24, in 1942. At her death she left 10 volumes of personal diaries (1889-1942), whose publication began in 1985.
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