There are three things Kenneth knew about his bride. She loved Lily's of the Valley, lighthouses and the nickname Rilla-my-Rilla haunted her dreams by way of Walter. So he built a home for his bride, took a nickname he had heard her father say and turned it into something beautiful. She was his Bride, his love, and his Lily of the Valley and he was taking her home.
There is a story, well known, of the Changi Quilt and the women who pieced it. There is another story, less of the monkey that brought peanuts to a woman in at the end of the world. The monkey's name was Puck, and the woman Una Meredith. This is the story of Puck the monkey and Una Meredith and of how, after the Second World War ends, they put their family back together. Twice.
With a year of college under her belt, Rilla Blythe seems to have life figured out fairly well. With a boyfriend who accepts her teenage mother status, two part-time jobs, and effectively co-parenting with Kenneth Ford and her mental health and eating are seemingly in her control for the better. Yes, Rilla thought her life was figured out until things change at a drop of a hat.
"The man at table 17 is a witch. I know that with absolute certainty. I know it as certainly as I know who I am. Or no, scratch that. I'm a lot more certain about the man being a witch than about almost anything concerning myself. After all, the question of what I am – and what is wrong with me – has baffled many a person cleverer than myself." A story both modern and magical.
Of all Anne Blythe's children, Walter was always different, in some undefined, fey way. In humanity, there are different yarns that weave into a diverse weave, delicate, lace, and breakable in the winds of life.
How do you recover from an unimaginable loss? Gilbert Blythe and Anne Shirley are a year into their marriage and are both trying to deal with the loss of their baby, Joyce. Each think the other blames them for the death and each try to hide their pain. Gilbert loves Anne but has lost hope and Anne loves Gilbert but has a secret she can't tell.
Roguishly handsome Gilbert Blythe returns to Avonlea after three years away in Alberta. He is expecting to waste the next year pretending to care about books and listening to the mindless chatter of the likes of Josie Pye, but one look and a slate would change that. Complicated with the obstinance of youth, this is one lesson he must learn. This is a slight twist on an old story.
When Kenneth Ford suggested Japan for their honeymoon, Rilla relished the idea but after weeks of trains and boats, she finds herself in a foreign land alone with her husband. Still anticipating what her mother spoke about, she has trouble enjoying the beauty around her.
The spark of hope that flashed in Gilbert's eyes at Convocation had been dashed by the refusal of a simple dance. But what if Anne was to refuse something - and someone - else? And he was there to see it? A reimagining of the end of Anne of the Island, by way of Wonderland.
My tribute to all of the ink that LMM spilled writing about graves. (Before Anne attended a single Redmond class in "Anne of the Island," she visited Old St. John's.) Anne and Gilbert live together in Kingsport, Nova Scotia, post-2022. Gilbert attends medical school. Anne works and visits St. John's Cemetery a lot. Sometimes she works in St. John's.
Vignettes within a character study that follows Marilla Cuthbert through different moments in her life. Inspiration comes from L.M. Montgomery's novels as well as Colleen Dewhurst's portrayal in the Sullivan movies and the first seasons of Road to Avonlea.
All Una Meredith wanted was to be clean of him, and she would do anything she could to make sure it happened. Warnings inside, pure angst.
Murderbot meets Anne of Green Gables. They bond over their love of Sanctuary Moon. Then they meet zombies. Inspired by a Wattpad challenge to add zombies to a retelling of a classic story.
Anne and Gilbert are newlyweds. On the first night of their honeymoon, Anne struggles with her emerging sexuality and the confusing feelings that ensue. Slowly, she learns to appreciate a new side of her beloved Gilbert Blythe, one that strikes her as both deeply arousing and sensually transgressive.
Loki's attention is drawn to an orphan girl on Midgard with green eyes, red hair, and the most wonderful imagination, and her maternal instinct goes into overdrive. Female Loki.
Anne is wondering back from a walk to Gilbert and baby Jem when a strange man asks her for directions. When things take a turn for the worst as he attacks her, she is on the outside of Four Winds. Will anyone come in time to save her or will she be left to die?
In "The Blythes Are Quoted," Clarissa Wilcox snuck into the deathbed vigil for one of Dr. Blythe's rich patients. She gossiped that she "could tell Mrs. Blythe a few things about Dr. Blythe and his nurses . . . yes, and about him and Mrs. Owen Ford." Find out the truth. Also, why did Anne give up on her writing?
A glittering party in Charlottetown draws the Blythes out of Ingleside, and Anne, in a just as glittery new dress, collects a few new hearts.
A simple, unremarkable-to-most season in the Four Winds community; where the weather is warm and obliging, an oldest son five years of age is becoming his own, and a father cannot help how much he loves that boys mother.
Set in 1981, Anne Shirley is about to begin her first year at York University. However, she has been trying to attract the attention of the pious Gilbert Blythe, whilst grappling with her ever-emerging sexuality.
Anne's history is a little different. So is Gilbert's in this semi modern telling with a few twists that depart from cannon. The two finally meet face to face in college and naturally Gilbert likes her. Low angst (other then mention of previous events, trigger warning for an attack on a female character). Semi modern times (2000s)
The sensation of living music, is by it s nature ephemeral, fantastic, fleeing, and yet so incisively present.
Unwanted, unloved, Katherine Brooke prepares herself for a life of endless monotony and lonely spinsterhood. There is no beauty or joy at all in life. Until she meets a certain redhead and discovers the magic of a place called Green Gables. Perhaps there is a bend in her road after all?
Being Anne Shirley's best friend - or second best friend counting Diana Barry - was a whirlwind of an adventure in itself. I always saw something of a kindred spirit in her. And not just because our hair was the same shade of fiery red but a soul tie in itself. But never did I imagine that through her, my world would turn upside down. I blame Gilbert Blythe entirely. Two-shot.
Anne and Gilbert are finally married but trouble strikes when Anne's past comes back to haunt her.
Correspondence is a dance of souls, isn't it? What can a letter do, especially if it contains a request that has to be complied with?
It was meant to be a marriage of convenience. But when Anne Shirley is forced to wed her spurned lover Gilbert Blythe in order to save her beloved Green Gables from being inherited by Sloanes, the sparks really begin to fly. Their marriage is much more than either Anne or Gilbert bargained for. As the trouble mounts, so does the desire…
"I just love bright red drinks."
Josie, who now lives in Four Winds, reveals a little too much in her diary - a little too much, that is, when Anne stumbles on it, and has a lot of questions. AU. Set near the end of Anne of Ingleside.
While Gilbert is studying medicine in New York, Anne started to work at the Orphanage. While working at the Orphanage, Anne becomes attached to a little orphan name Ruby. When Ruby becomes sick, Anne asks Gilbert for Ruby to be his first patient. Of course, Gilbert couldn't so no to Anne's request. He takes Ruby on as his patient. The three of the become really close over