Picture of author.

Isabella Alden (1841–1930)

Author of Ester Ried

295+ Works 2,807 Members 5 Reviews 4 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Isabella Macdonald Alden [aka Pansy] (1841-1930) Buffalo Electrotype and Engraving Co., Buffalo, N.Y.

Series

Works by Isabella Alden

Ester Ried (1901) 145 copies
Tip Lewis and His Lamp (1867) 102 copies
The King's Daughter (1873) 91 copies
Three People (1871) 84 copies, 1 review
Four Girls at Chautauqua (1876) 80 copies
Ester Ried "Yet Speaking" (1883) 77 copies
A Dozen of Them (1888) 62 copies
Wise and Otherwise (1873) 51 copies
Ruth Erskine's Crosses (1879) 50 copies
Chrissy's endeavor (1889) 46 copies
Judge Burnham's Daughters (1888) 43 copies
The Pansy 39 copies
The Hall in the Grove (1881) 38 copies
As in a mirror (1898) 34 copies
Christie's Christmas (1884) 33 copies
The Randolphs (1876) 29 copies
Cunning Workmen (1875) 28 copies
Four Mothers at Chautauqua (1913) 27 copies
The Browning Boys (1886) 27 copies
Lost on the trail (1911) 24 copies
Overruled (1897) 23 copies
Household Puzzles (1874) 22 copies
Side by Side (1893) 22 copies
Interrupted (1884) 22 copies
An Endless Chain (1884) 21 copies
Eighty-Seven (1887) 21 copies
Links in Rebecca's Life (1878) 20 copies
Bernie's White Chicken (1867) 20 copies
Twenty Minutes Late (1893) 20 copies
One Commonplace Day (1886) 19 copies
Miss Dee Dunmore Bryant (1891) 19 copies
Profiles (1888) 19 copies
Jessie Wells (1865) 18 copies
Divers Women (1880) 18 copies
A Hedge Fence (2014) 17 copies
Helen Lester (1865) — Author — 16 copies
Her Associate Members (1891) 15 copies
The Pocket Measure (1881) 15 copies
We Twelve Girls (2016) 14 copies
Spun From Fact (1886) 13 copies
Ester Ried's Namesake (1906) 13 copies
Six o'clock in the evening (1889) 13 copies
John Remington, Martyr (1892) 13 copies
A Sevenfold Trouble (1889) 12 copies
Ruth Erskine's Son (1907) 12 copies
The exact truth (1892) 12 copies
Pansies for Thoughts (2024) 12 copies
Making Fate (1896) 12 copies
Pansy's Sunday Book (2012) 11 copies
Only Ten Cents (1895) 11 copies
Stephen Mitchell's Journey (1893) 11 copies
Reuben's Hindrances (2017) 10 copies
Unto the End (2014) 10 copies
The Browns at Mt. Hermon (1908) 9 copies, 1 review
By way of the wilderness (1899) 8 copies
Six Little Girls (2013) 8 copies
Mara (1903) 6 copies
Memories of Yesterdays (1931) 6 copies
An interrupted night (1929) 6 copies
Pauline (1900) 6 copies
Sunshine Factory (2007) 6 copies
Getting Ahead (1877) 6 copies
Wanted (1894) 6 copies
Five Friends (1882) 5 copies
The fortunate calamity (1927) 5 copies
The older brother (1897) 5 copies
David Ransom's Watch (1905) 5 copies
Our Little Men and Women (1889) 5 copies
Two boys 5 copies
Danger Cliff 4 copies
Mary Burton Abroad (1882) 4 copies
Nettie in the kitchen 4 copies, 1 review
Monteagle (2016) 4 copies
Grandpa's darlings (2021) 4 copies
Bargaining 4 copies
Going Halves 4 copies
Next Things 4 copies
Brave Tommy 4 copies
Doris Farrand's Vocation (1904) 4 copies
Glimpses of Girlhood (1892) 3 copies
Who Did It 3 copies
In Vacation 3 copies
Fred's Puzzle 3 copies
A Morning Ride 3 copies
Sadie's Victory 3 copies
Red ribbon 3 copies
Ringing Words 2 copies
Opportunity 2 copies
Boys of Algeria 2 copies
The Long Way Home (1912) 2 copies
Leafy fern 2 copies
Huldy 1 copy
Vida 1 copy
Wise Alice 1 copy
Good Cheer 1 copy
New Nerves 1 copy
Young Folks 1 copy
At home stories (1887) 1 copy
Sowing Seed 1 copy
Transformed 1 copy
Our Darlings 1 copy
Only a Spark 1 copy
Chopsticks 1 copy
Little hands 1 copy
Company try 1 copy
Worth having 1 copy
Mrs. Dunlap 1 copy
Julia Ried (1872) 1 copy
At home and abroad (1888) 1 copy
Amazing Fate 1 copy
After Play Stories (1893) 1 copy
The Workers 1 copy

Associated Works

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

3.5 stars.

HA! Somebody, anybody, please give me a pat on the back for finishing this! It took me over two months, but hey! At least I did it!
 
Flagged
SarahGraceGrzy | Oct 2, 2018 |
Reuben Watson Stone is a fourteen-year-old boy who lives in a New York city with his mother and younger sister Elizabeth (Beth). The family is poor because Reuben’s father has been dead for some time, and Reuben doesn’t go to school because, as the man of the house, he must go out each day to look for odd jobs so that he might earn enough money to get food, buy coal, and pay the rent. One night, he rescues a young drunken man named Edward Harrison who “rewards” him by offering him a job at St. Mark’s Saloon, but Reuben refuses because he has seen first-hand the effects of drink in his encounter with Edward. His mother wonders if he shouldn’t go ahead and take the job, but his decision is encouraged by their new neighbor, Miss Priscilla Hunter, who tells him that her father, brother, and a friend all died as a result of liquor.
However, through Edward, Reuben meets a visiting businessman named Mr. Barrows who, taking a liking to the young boy for his strong moral convictions and honesty, invites Reuben to come home with him and work at his small-town box factory in a rural area at some distance from the city. Arrangements are even made for Mrs. Stone, Beth, and Miss Hunter to move and get work with Mr. Barrow as well. However, the enemy lays many snares for Reuben. There are townspeople who think that Mr. Barrow should hire local boys instead of bringing a stranger in. There are other boys in the factory who tease and tempt Reuben. Then Reuben is unjustly accused of laming Mr. Barrows’s horse and not telling anyone about it. And all during this time, Reuben is trying to make up his mind whether to give his life to Christ or not. What will happen to Reuben? And will he decide to trust in Jesus or not?
Author Isabella Macdonald Alden (1841–1930) was born to Isaac and Myra Spafford Macdonald, of Rochester, NY. Given the nickname “Pansy” as a child, she often wrote under that pseudonym, even editing a juvenile magazine named The Pansy. After being homeschooled by her father, she married a minister named Gustavus Rossenberg Alden and wrote around 100 books, mostly didactic fiction. I picked this one up when visiting in Pennsylvania and in doing some research on it couldn’t find it at first in a listing of Mrs. Alden’s books. However, I later learned that it was originally published under the title The Man of the House. Some people may feel that stories like this are hopelessly outdated and completely irrelevant for today’s children. However, many of Mrs. Alden’s books are being republished for parents who want reading material for their families which is based on traditional Judaeo-Christian values rather than much of the pathetic drivel which passes for modern children’s literature. I immensely enjoyed reading this book and especially liked the anti-liquor and anti-tobacco message. It is a good story for boys.
… (more)
 
Flagged
Homeschoolbookreview | May 4, 2012 |
Lovely etchings. Pansy is pen name of Isabella Macdonald Alden 1841-1931 Rochester NY. Wrote dozens of childrens books.
 
Flagged
kitchengardenbooks | Apr 7, 2012 |
Published in 1908, the setting for this book is the 'new' camp at Mt. Hermon, California. Her description of the locale, set amidst towering redwoods, is beautiful. Surprisingly enough, current photographs on the Mount Hermon website show the natural setting of the camp looking as Pansy described it over 100 years ago.

I've read all but a handful of Pansy's 88 books for adults and young adults, and this is the only one I recall being a comedy. The Browns of the title begin with Mary Brown, who continually meets more Browns as she travels west to this camp at Mount Hermon. Her experiences with her new Brown acquaintances form the comedy, yet at its heart, this, as all of Pansy's books are, is didactic fiction.

It is not one of her best works, still I enjoyed it, though probably because I'm a die-hard Pansy fan.
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½
 
Flagged
countrylife | Feb 28, 2011 |

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Statistics

Works
295
Also by
4
Members
2,807
Popularity
#9,156
Rating
3.8
Reviews
5
ISBNs
245
Languages
2
Favorited
4

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