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.
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?
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?
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
In "The Blythes Are Quoted," Clarissa Wilcox snuck into the bedroom of one of Dr. Blythe's dying patients. During this visit, 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." Is there truth to any of this gossip? Is there truth to any other gossip that is out there about Gilbert and Anne?
"Faith Meredith is scared. That, in itself, is an unusual occurrence, because it's not often that Faith Meredith is afraid of anything. That's the first unusual aspect about this entire situation. The second unusual aspect is what has her afraid – or rather, who." A look at what life could have looked like for Faith Meredith if Jem Blythe hadn't escaped the German POW camp.