
Book #13 of 2017:
A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett
The first third of this book is a bit of a bore, as the heroine’s only real character trait is that she is nicer and smarter and with a better relationship to her father than all the other girls at her boarding school. And since she’s also the richest of them, it’s hard not to see this characterization as a defense of classism and the inherent superiority of the wealthy. Sara becomes a little more compelling once she loses her family fortune and the narrative shifts into a Cinderella story, but she is still perpetually cast as a better person than those who are poor by birth (and who are regularly described in patronizing and animalistic terms by both Sara and the text). In the end she becomes rich again, her fellow maid gets the reward of being Sara’s servant now, and there’s not really any evidence that the child has learned or gained anything from the experience.
★★☆☆☆








