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Other editions of book The Abbey Girls Again

  • The Abbey Girls Again

    Elsie J. Oxenham

    language (Reading Essentials, March 14, 2020)
    This is the book that introduces Mary-Dorothy and her sister, 'bad girl' Biddy. Mary and Biddy meet Jen and Joy and are taken under their wings - which is to say, the Abbey girls try and make them into the kind of girls they make everyone into.
  • The Abbey Girls again

    Elsie J. OXENHAM

    Hardcover (The Children's Press, July 6, 1966)
    None
  • The Abbey Girls again

    Elsie Jeanette Oxenham

    Hardcover (The Children's Press, July 5, 1961)
    None
  • The Abbey Girls Again

    Elsie Jeanette Oxenham

    Hardcover (Collins' Clear-Type Press, July 5, 1943)
    None
  • THE ABBEY GIRLS IN TOWN

    Elise Jeanette Oxenham

    (The Children's Press, July 6, 1968)
    The Abbey Girls Again (The Abbey School Series)
  • THE ABBEY GIRLS AGAIN

    Elsie J Oxenham

    (, Jan. 21, 2020)
    This is the book that introduces Mary-Dorothy and her sister, 'bad girl' Biddy, and it was something of a disappointment in that it seemed as if it should have been a major event, but really nothing much happens in the book. Mary and Biddy meet Jen and Joy and are taken under their wings (which is to say, the Abbey girls try and make them into the kind of girls they make everyone into.)Taken in terms of the series as a whole, however, it's not without interest. This establishes Mary as a shrinking, lifeless character, and in the books to come we really get to see her grow and become an increasingly important figure in the lives of those around her. It also shows Biddy as she always is; caught between her 'business' side (the side we're not meant to approve of, of course) and her 'nice' side. (Can you tell I have a soft spot for Biddy?) Meanwhile, Joy (who is at her best here, lacking neither self-awareness nor compassion.โ€”Helen, on Goodreads.com.
  • The Abbey Girls Again

    Elsie J. Oxenham

    (, Feb. 8, 2020)
    This is the book that introduces Mary-Dorothy and her sister, 'bad girl' Biddy, and it was something of a disappointment in that it seemed as if it should have been a major event, but really nothing much happens in the book. Mary and Biddy meet Jen and Joy and are taken under their wings (which is to say, the Abbey girls try and make them into the kind of girls they make everyone into.)Taken in terms of the series as a whole, however, it's not without interest. This establishes Mary as a shrinking, lifeless character, and in the books to come we really get to see her grow and become an increasingly important figure in the lives of those around her. It also shows Biddy as she always is; caught between her 'business' side (the side we're not meant to approve of, of course) and her 'nice' side. (Can you tell I have a soft spot for Biddy?) Meanwhile, Joy (who is at her best here, lacking neither self-awareness nor compassion.
  • The Abbey Girls Again

    Elsie Jeanette Oxenham

    Hardcover (Collins' Clear-Type Press, March 15, 1930)
    None