Anna Maria Rose Wright
Personal Information
Description
Full name: Anna Maria Louisa Perrott Rose Wright. She wrote children's books and stories under the name Anna Maria Wright. In 1950, she was working in New Jersey as a teacher, and she adopted a disturbed Latvian war orphan named Andritins. She wrote the book Gentle House (1954) about this experience, and she went on to write books and articles about her adopted children, under the name Anna Perrott Rose.
Books
Room for One More
Anna tells of her life with her husband raising their 3 children and how they came about to raise 3 foster children. It is a book of love and child rearing. Some of the stories she tells are funny and some are heartbreaking - just as life is. The author has a delicious sense of humor and timing.
The gentle house
Wonderful book about how a dedicated teacher helped a troubled boy--true, too. Read this book!
Summer at Buckhorn
It is the story, marvelously evocative of time and place, of five children who are sent to spend the summer with their aunt on her Virginia plantation when their mother is suddenly taken ill. Their idyllic summer is at first spoiled by a guest, a skinny, bespectacled "sissy" of a city boy, who at first dislikes "the Five"(as they are called throughout the book), but slowly grows to like and accept them, and the feeling is mutual. The Five and the boy learn a lot about each other, as they teach him how to have fun and be a normal kid. As a reader, I hated to see the summer end almost as much as the Five and their new friend when they have to return home. It may seem politically incorrect to some of today's readers as to the depiction of African-Americans, but the Five, even though just children (the oldest is 14) have been raised to treat all people, black and white, with the dignity and respect they deserve. I recommend it to anyone of any age who wants to go back to a simpler time, or who just wants to have a good time reading. (P.S.--by "evocative of time and place," I mean that it is set in the state of Virginia in the early years of the last century, and some of the older characters still remember the War Between the States.) The chapters where the Five are traveling by train from New York to Virginia (with a stop in Washington D.C. along the way) are particullarly entertaining, as is author Anna Rose Wright's descriptions of the farm, its surroundings and its people. (It is based on incidents from her own childhood.)
The life of Hugo the horse
The birth and coming-of-age of a farm horse from the horse's point of view.
The dramatic life of Abraham Lincoln
The Dramatic Life of Abraham Lincoln was published in the 1920s. What is different about it, is that it was based on interviews with people who actually KNEW Lincoln, people like childhood friends, neighbors, relatives, bosses and co-workers. While the descritions are a bit "folksy" (again, it was the 1920s) I found it to be riveting - particularly the description of Lincoln's early life in the midwest. There are a few stories discussed, such as Lincoln's birth, that I'd never read anywhere else. Interestingly, an award winning movie was made based on the book, but it was not properly preserved, and no copies of it exist.
Whirligig house
This is a wonderful story about a family with five children who deal with their mother leaving on Christmas Eve for a year-long hospital stay. they manage to keep the house going despite many misadventures. I read this book to my children (now 12 and 13) every year between Thanksgiving and Christmas and they love it.