Vintage Children's BooksMy collection of vintage books was started for me by my beloved Great Aunt Liz. While my parents certainly encouraged my love of reading, it was GAL {for that was what we all called her} that truly nurtured it. Her passion for literature {and art and music and history} was contagious.

I awaited birthday and Christmas presents from Liz with excited anticipation. I knew there would be another aging volume for me to pore over, another world to get lost in, always with a brief dedication on the inside cover. Since Liz passed away a couple of years ago the sight of her almost illegible handwriting on those antique pages has become even more precious to me.
The Secret Garden The Secret Garden The Secret Garden Little Lord Fauntleroy Vintage Children's Books

The first module I took when I embarked on my English MA a few years ago was called ‘Transatlantic Childhoods: Literature and the Child Study Movement 1880-1920’. The class examined ‘tensions in attitudes to, and representations of, children in the nineteenth-century, when emergent sciences, especially evolutionary theory and psychology, raised significant theoretical challenges to previously cherished “Romantic” assumptions about children’s innocence, malleability, and intuitive, spiritual creativity’.

It sounded interesting on paper, and I can’t deny the reading list was delightful, but when it came to it, I hated it. The lecturer was an intimidating woman, who seemed to have little sympathy for me as I struggled with both a new discipline and the challenges of post-graduate study. I left every seminar feeling like the most stupid person in the room.

When I was presented with a less than favourable mark for my final assessment, I had a good cry and contemplated giving it all up. Perhaps I wasn’t cut out for literature after all? Of course, it all turned out alright in the end, but I certainly don’t have fond memories of that first module.

The thing about university is, sometimes what we take away from the experience, what we absorb from a class, the things we really learn and appreciate, isn’t the stuff on the curriculum. Although I never truly grasped the link between the work of Frances Hodgson Burnett and The Child Study movement, I did learn the simple pleasure of reading children’s literature as an adult.

Returning to the books that permeated my childhood has given me no end of pleasure. Not only am I drawn in by the story and its characters, but I am also able to immerse myself in memories from the time I originally read the novel. It is literature and nostalgia rolled into one. Looking at things anew, through the lens of adulthood, and contemplating just how much of the person I am today is down to the books I read way back when, is fascinating.

So it is that my little girl and I are sharing a library more and more these days. As ever, I can’t resist filling the shelves with beautiful volumes and inviting texts. Izzy has almost finished this copy of The Secret Garden which features whimsical illustrations by Lauren Child of Charlie and Lola fame.The Secret GardenThe Secret GardenThe Secret GardenThe Secret Garden I also find the range of Vintage Children’s Classics, with their beautifully illustrated covers, pretty irresistible. I re-read A Little Princess towards the end of last year. Such an enchanting tale. I’m certain that as a child I must have aspired to an imagination as vivid and colourful as that which Burnett bestows upon Sara Crewe.     Vintage Children's ClassicsBlack BeautyThe Little Princess Next on my reading list is this beauty. I could stroke the yellowed, aging pages all day. I can’t wait to get re-acquainted with Jo and the girls. Little WomenVintage Books Little Women

I should add, there’s nothing to say you have to be re-reading a children’s book. Maybe you missed some of the classics as a youngster? I’ve heard great things about I Capture the Castle by Dodi Smith, but it somehow passed me by all those years ago. It’s on my reading list now though. Here are a few other suggestions for you to peruse….

What books would you add to the list? Which stories from your childhood stand out the most?

Love Audrey xxx

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