Neha Patil (Editor)

Gladys in Grammarland

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Language
  
English

Publication date
  
c. 1897

Pages
  
48

Author
  
Audrey Mayhew Allen

Genre
  
Fantasy literature

Publisher
  
Roxburghe Press

Media type
  
Print (Hardback)

Originally published
  
1897

Page count
  
48

Country
  
United Kingdom

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Similar
  
John Bull's Adventures in the Fis, Lost in Blunderland, Rollo in Emblemland, The Admiral's Caravan, Clara in Blunderland

Gladys in Grammarland is a novel by Audrey Mayhew Allen, written ca. 1897 and published by the Roxburghe Press of Westminster. It is an educational imitation of Lewis Carroll's book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

In this story, Gladys becomes sleepy after class and finds that a Verb Fairy has taken an interest in her education. She is taken, through a cardboard door with "English Grammar" written on it, into Grammarland, where she meets with a great many Verbs, who explain the concepts of transitivity and intransitivity to her. She is tried at court and for using bad grammar, and imprisoned, where she studies some grammar. At length she is released and tried to mediate a dispute between King Proper Noun and King Common Noun.

Gladys in Grammarland is one of a class of books called a "didactic imitation" by Carolyn Sigler.

Audrey Mayhew Allen was born in 1870, and so was about 27 years of age when she wrote Gladys in Grammarland. She was the granddaughter of Henry Mayhew, one of the two founders (1841) of the satirical and humorous magazine Punch, and of Douglas William Jerrold, a dramatist and writer.

The book features a number of line-drawings by an artist credited as "Claudine".

References

Gladys in Grammarland Wikipedia