Posted on November 30, 2017
I've read about authors whose books languished - either unpublished, or mostly unknown and unread - during their lifetime, but became popular after they died.
This is not one of those stories.

Montgomery was prolific - that means she wrote a lot - with 20 novels, 530 short stories, 500 poems, and 30 essays to her credit. Even her non-published writings have been read, and even studied, as scholars have pored over her diaries and letters to learn which aspects of her writing are autobiographical.
Authors are generally told to "write what you know." This makes some sense - if you are, say, an Israeli girl who moves to Morocco, who else is going to write your story, if you do not?
(On the other hand, I'm glad that some authors take major flights of fantasy, or we wouldn't have the Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Alice in Wonderland, Harry Potter at Hogwarts, or science fiction!)

Green Gables farm - an actual farm that was owned by Montgomery's cousins - is a popular tourist site. Starting in the early 1900s, visitors from around the world began to visit Green Gables and the nearby town, and because of that interest, the farm and surrounding lands were made into Prince Edward Island National Park. Even now, the Green Gables farmhouse is one of the most-visited historic sites in all of Canada!
Today, get your Anne on. You can watch many different versions of Anne of Green Gables - movies, made-for-TV movies, TV series - both live-action and animated.
There have also been radio productions, plays, musicals, and web productions!
Here is a compilation of several different versions of an important scene from the story.
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