Hope and Have; Fanny Grant Among the Indians

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Oliver Optic 1866
English
  • Preface
  • The Naughty Girl
  • Thou shalt not steal
  • Letting the Cat out
  • Fanny the Skipper
  • Down the River
  • Kate's Defection
  • The Soldier's Family
  • The Sick Girl
  • Hope and Have
  • Good out of Evil
  • Patience and Pardon
  • The New Home
  • The Indian Massacre
  • The Indian Boy
  • The Conference
  • The Young Exiles
  • The Night Attack
  • The Visitor at the Island
  • The Indian Ambush
  • Conclusion
The fifth volume of the Woodville stories contains the experience of Fanny Grant, who from a very naughty girl became a very good one, by the influence of a pure and beautiful example. The story is not an illustration of the "pleasures of hope;" but an attempt to show the young reader that what we most desire, in moral and spiritual, as well as worldly things, we labor the hardest to obtain—a truism adopted by the heroine in the form of the principal title of the volume, Hope and Have. Previous book in the series is Noddy Newman on a Cruise. The 6th and final book of the series is Haste and Waste. - Summary by Scarlett Martin from book preface

Woodville Series:
Rich and Humble; or, The Mission of Bertha Grant
In School and Out; or, The Conquest of Richard Grant
Watch and Wait; or, The Young Fugitives
Work and Win; or, Noddy Newman on a Cruise
Hope and Have; or, Fanny Grant Among the Indians
Haste and Waste; or, The Young Pilot of Lake Champlain

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