Home  

Browse
  • Home
  • Current Specials
  • What's New

    G.A. Henty:
  • Hardcover
  • Tradepaper
  • Featherweight
  • Study Guides
  • Coloring Books
  • About G.A. Henty
    C.D. Baker:
  • Books
  • About
    C.M. Yonge:
  • Books
  • About
  • Other Publications
  • Audios
  • Beverly's Guides
  • Literary Special Effects
  • Nursery Rhymes
  • Join Mailing List and recieve our FREE e-newsletter
  • About Us
  • Podcast

    RSS Headlines

  • Have you moved or changed email addresses?



  • THE CAPTAIN MAGAZINE

    Charlotte M. Yonge

    WHO WAS CHARLOTTE YONGE?

    Charlotte M. Yonge was one of the most prolific-and in her day, successful-writers of the Victorian era. In her lifetime she published well over 100 books in several genres: history, biography, adult fiction, and children's historical fiction. Her first adult novel, The Heir of Redclyffe, which appeared in 1853, was an enormous success. In fact, it was as famous in its time as Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights,





    which had been published six years earlier.
    The first of her historical novels for children was The Little Duke, the story of the childhood of Richard,Duke of Normandy, the great-grandfather of William the Conqueror, which was published in 1854, and which today is perhaps the best-known of her children's books. Another favorite, The Dove in the Eagle's Nest, was published in 1866.

    CHARLOTTE YONGE: A BRIEF SKETCH Charlotte Yonge was born in 1823 in the village of Otterborne, England, the oldest child of William Yonge, a retired Army officer turned country squire, and his wife, Frances. Otterborne was her home for her entire life. Taught at home by her father, early in life she developed a love of history and literature. Her favorite author was Sir Walter Scott, considered by many to be the father of the historical novel.
    Her career as a teacher began at the age of seven in the Sunday School of her church, and continued far into her adult life. Her writing career was well on its way in her teens, and by her early twenties her stories were appearing in magazines for young people. Her first book, Le Chateau de Melville, written in French, was published in 1838, when she was just fifteen years old. Her work as an editor spanned more than thirty years and included the editorship of The Monthly Packet, a magazine for girls that she founded in 1851.
    Like many another literary and artistic women of her time, she never married, and pursued her writing career within a close circle of friends and family. Her father and her minister, John Keble, were her mentors and critics. Although she had no children of her own, she was intimate with those of her brother, and her teaching brought her into close contact with many many more.

    CHARLOTTE YONGE AND G. A. HENTYCharlotte Yonge and G. A. Henty were very different people, and lived very different lives. One was single; the other married and had a number of children. One spent her entire life in a tiny village; the other traveled widely. They had this in common, however: they both loved history, and they both loved to write stories about real people. Mr. Henty, dubbed "The Prince of Story-tellers," found success in a story model that always included a brave and resourceful boy-hero who wins out in the end-no matter the fate of the actual historical figures in the stories. Miss Yonge's main characters, on the other hand, were as likely to be young ladies as young men, and more often than not, her principal subjects in her historical novels were the historical figures themselves, rather than fictional ones. While she relates the historical events faithfully, she often details as well the moral and spiritual development of both her historical and fictional characters.

    WHY CHARLOTTE YONGE?We've decided to reprint the works of Charlotte Yonge quite simply because-as with Mr. Henty-we love her books! The first volume we reprinted was The Little Duke, as it was not only the first of Miss Yonge's efforts at writing historical fiction for children, but it continues to our day to enjoy its initial popularity. The second volume in the series is The Dove in the Eagle's Nest, which will be available to our readers in December 2003.
    Readers new to Charlotte Yonge will quickly discover that she is unabashedly Christian. Her characters are often refined by fire: they suffer physically and mentally-often unjustly, sometimes simply because of an accident rather than anyone's malice-they learn to conquer weaknesses in temperament and the sin of pride, and they emerge from their time of testing better people, more humble, and more dependent on God than ever before. Many of the finest 19th century novels address issues of pride and weakness of temperament; many contain characters that must deal with physical or social handicaps; moral choices abound. But in none of these books is there a specifically Christian approach to either the problems or the solutions. The 19th century was a time of much upheaval spiritually, politically, and socially. Many sincere people, among them writers, turned from orthodox Christianity and found an easier path in Unitarianism, Transcendentalism, Utilitarianism, and even Theosophy and spiritualism. And as the leading thinkers turned from Christianity, so did many "ordinary" people. Thus, one could say that the sacrifice, the refining, the self-denial, and the faithfulness of many of Miss Yonge's characters went out of fashion-at least, they would serve as an unwelcome reminder of a way of life left behind.
    It is Charlotte Yonge's Christian worldview, combined with her fine writing and great ability to tell a good story, that gives her writing such force. And it is just such writing as she offers that we and our children need today.


    Member Login
    Email:

    Password:

    Members Only Section
    For Captain Subscribers

    This service is for Captain subscribers only.

    NEW ITEM

    Kuyper and Charlotte Yonge
    Click here to read about this wonderful Victorian writer