![]() Few writers can portray goodness and evoke wonder as vividly as George MacDonald (1824-1905). Or create characters of such wisdom and spiritual insight. C.S.Lewis wrote: “I have never concealed the fact that I regarded him as my master; indeed I fancy I have never written a book in which I did not quote from him.” Below are some of MacDonald’s books which my wife and I have loved and treasured for decades, reading them first in editions for modern readers, then in unabridged electronic (public domain) form, working to find versions that maintain the author’s italics. In these “MacDonald-lover editions” I’ve given additional proof-reading and tried to make the formatting more friendly. Enjoy! Harold N Miller, Broadway, VA |
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MacDonald is best remembered as the creator of beloved fantasies and fairy tales. He once declared, “I write, not for children, but for the child-like, whether they be of five, or fifty, or seventy-five.” ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Those of us who love these books do so not because of literary quality (which is middling to good) but because of MacDonald. Oswald Chambers said, “How I love that man!” C.S.Lewis said, “I know hardly any other writer who seems to be closer...to the Spirit of Christ.” Out of MacDonald’s life and faith come characters who draw us by their calm, wise presence and great-hearted vision of God.
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![]() ![]() Much dialogue is in broad Scots with some words difficult to deduce; this edition gives some definitions in superscript — unsightly but handy.
![]() Much dialogue is in broad Scots with some words difficult to deduce; this edition gives a few definitions in superscript — unsightly but handy.
![]() Occasional dialogue in broad Scots can have words difficult to deduce; this edition gives a few definitions in superscript — unsightly but handy. This edition also trims many sentences that seemed too thick. (At least my wife and I couldn’t understand them!) Trimmed text was kept in HTML comments, visible if one views the HTML source code.
![]() This edition also trims many sentences that seemed too thick. (At least my wife and I couldn’t understand them!) Trimmed text was kept in HTML comments, visible if one views the HTML source code. ![]() This edition also trims many sentences that seemed too thick. (At least my wife and I couldn’t understand them!) Trimmed text was kept in HTML comments, visible if one views the HTML source code. ![]() This edition also trims phrases that seemed too thick—I couldn’t understand them—while trying to preserve MacDonald’s profound asides that we love. Trimmed text was kept in HTML comments, visible if one views the HTML source code. ![]() This edition also trims many phrases that felt thick and hard to follow—while working to keep MacDonald’s profound asides that we love. (Trimmed text was kept in HTML comments, visible if one views the HTML source code.) ![]() Dialogue in broad Scots often includes words difficult to deduce; so some definitions are placed in the textin blue superscript—untidy but convenient. This edition trimmed occasional phrases that seemed impossibly thick (trimmed text is visible as HTML comments when one views the source code of the “read in browser” versions). ![]() Dialogue in broad Scots often includes words difficult to deduce; so some definitions are placed in the textin blue superscript—untidy but convenient. This edition trimmed occasional phrases that seemed impossibly thick (trimmed text is visible as HTML comments when one views the source code of the “read in browser” versions). |
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* To read a book in Kindle, download the EPUB file. (On a computer, right-click on the link and select "save as...". To find the file after downloading, check Downloads on your device; it should be there.) Then email it to your Kindle account. (Here's an Amazon article telling how to do that.)
* Option1 - direct link to the ebook file on this site. Option2 - link leads to the ebook file on Dropbox. |
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