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The Railway Children

By Edith Nesbit - Illustrated

by E. Nesbit ยท 2016

ISBN: 1535095032 9781535095037

Category: Fiction / Classics

Page count: 196

Why buy our paperbacks? <ul> <li>Most Popular Gift Edition - One of it's kind</li> </ul> <ul> <li>Printed in USA on High Quality Paper</li> </ul> <ul> <li>Expedited shipping</li> </ul> <ul> <li>Standard Font size of 10 for all books</li> </ul> <ul> <li>30 Days Money Back Guarantee</li> </ul> <ul> <li>Fulfilled by Amazon</li> </ul> <ul> <li>Unabridged (100% Original content)</li> </ul> BEWARE OF LOW-QUALITY SELLERS <p>Don't buy cheap paperbacks just to save a few dollars. Most of them use low-quality papers & binding. Their pages fall off easily. Some of them even use very small font size of 6 or less to increase their profit margin. It makes their books completely unreadable.</p> About The Railway Children <p>The Railway Children is a children's book by Edith Nesbit, originally serialised in The London Magazine during 1905 and first published in book form in 1906. It has been adapted for the screen several times, of which the 1970 film version is the best known. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography credits Oswald Barron, who had a deep affection for Nesbit, with having provided the plot. The story concerns a family who move to "Three Chimneys", a house near the railway, after the father, who works at the Foreign office, is imprisoned after being falsely accused of spying. The children befriend an Old Gentleman who regularly takes the 9:15 train near their home; he is eventually able to help prove their father's innocence, and the family is reunited. The family take care of a Russian exile, Mr Szczepansky, who came to England looking for his family (later located) and Jim, the grandson of the Old Gentleman, who suffers a broken leg in a tunnel. The theme of an innocent man being falsely imprisoned for espionage and finally vindicated might have been influenced by the Dreyfus Affair, which was a prominent worldwide news item a few years before the book was written. The Russian exile, persecuted by the Tsars for writing "a beautiful book about poor people and how to help them" and subsequently helped by the children, was most likely an amalgam of the real-life dissidents Sergius Stepniak and Peter Kropotkin who were both friends of the author.</p>