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+ 100 Total Pages |
Read it on All Devices |
+ 1,000 Active Readers |
Book Description |
| “A Sailor’s Lass” by Emma Leslie is a late 19th-century novel that follows Tiny, a young girl rescued from a shipwreck by the Coomber family, fishermen living in a boat on the English coast. As Tiny integrates into their household, she brings hope and challenges, revealing the family’s dynamics and the hardships of coastal life. The narrative explores themes of family, love, survival, and faith within a tight-knit fishing community. |
About Author |
| Emma Leslie |
| Emma Leslie (1838–1909) was the pen name of Emma Boultwood, an English author renowned for her extensive contributions to children’s literature and historical fiction. Born in Greenwich, London, she was the daughter of Thomas Boultwood, a bootmaker. In her twenties, she worked as a governess before embarking on her writing career in the 1860s, during which she authored over 100 books, many published by the Religious Tract Society and the Sunday School Union.Her younger sister, Harriet Boultwood, was also a writer, contributing to the family’s literary legacy. In 1873, Emma married Thomas Francis Dixon, a clerk, and they had two sons. She spent much of her life in Lewisham, London, and continued writing into the early 20th century. Emma Leslie passed away in 1909 in Pembroke, Wales, where she is buried. |



