Welcome to the World of E. (Edith) Nesbit
A woman born a hundred years too early, Edith Nesbit lived a very modern life. Everything about her life was a protest against the limits placed on a woman in Victorian England. Edith wore her hair short, smoked heavily and was politically active.
Read Edith Nesbit's biography, download her works in popular ebook formats for FREE and, checkout the links to Edith Nesbit DVDs and books.
Edith Nesbit Biography
E. (Edith) Nesbit was born in London on August 15th 1858. The youngest of five children, she was known to her family as 'Daisy' and due to her sister's poor health she spent her early years living in various locations in France and England. In 1871 the family moved back to England and rented Halstead Hall in Kent where Edith and her brothers used to play near the railway line - a location that later inspired The Railway Children.
When Nesbit was 17 the family moved to London and at the age of 21 and while seven months pregnant, Edith married bank clerk Hubert Bland. They shared a love of poetry and collaborated on many projects throughout a turbulent relationship where both partners openly conducted extra-marital affairs. Apart from her own two children, she brought up several that Bland fathered with his mistresses.
They were both socialists and involved in the Fabian Society (a precursor to the British Labor Party) from its inception - even naming one of their children Fabian after their joint interest. Nesbit befriended several of its members, including George Bernard Shaw (with whom she had an affair) and H.G. Wells. Adopting a nonconformist style, she cut her hair short, smoked heavily and wore less restrictive clothing than Victorian fashion dictated. Inspired by the Fabians ideals, she wrote and lectured on socialism throughout the 1880s.
When Bland's business ventures failed, Nesbit became the main breadwinner and undertook other work to finance their growing household. She became a successful children's writer with novels including The Story of the Treasure-Seekers (1899), The Wouldbegoods (1901), Five Children and It (1902), The Phoenix and the Carpet (1904), The Railway Children (1906), and The Enchanted Castle (1907). Hubert Bland also collaborated with Nesbit on her writing, much of it being serialised in the London Weekly Dispatch under the alias 'Fabian Bland'.
After the death of Hubert Bland in 1913, Edith married ship's engineer, Thomas Tucker. She continued to write children's books but years of heavy smoking took their toll and she died from lung cancer on 22 April 1924.
Biography reprinted with permission from www.eBookTakeAway.com
Free Edith Nesbit eBooks in HTML, PDF and Text formats
Many Edith Nesbit novels are now available for free in the public domain. Follow the links below for some of her most popular works in HTML, PDF and text formats.
The Railway Children [E. Nesbit] | eBookTakeAway.com
Download The Railway Children by E Nesbit in HTML, more...0 points
Five Children and It [E. Nesbit] | eBookTakeAway.com
Download Five Children and It by E Nesbit in HTML, more...0 points
The Phoenix and the Carpet [E. Nesbit] | eBookTakeAway.com
Download The Phoenix and the Carpet by E Nesbit in more...0 points
The Enchanted Castle [E. Nesbit] | eBookTakeAway.com
Download The Enchanted Castle by E Nesbit in HTML, more...0 points
The Wouldbegoods [E. Nesbit] | eBookTakeAway.com
Download The Wouldbegoods by E Nesbit in HTML, PDF more...0 points
Edith Nesbit Bargains at Amazon
Edith Nesbit: A Woman of Passion
Amazon Price: $18.68 (as of 07/25/2008)
List Price: $23.95
Five Children and It
Amazon Price: (as of 07/25/2008)
List Price: $3.50
The Story of The Amulet
Amazon Price: $7.99 (as of 07/25/2008)
List Price: $7.99
The Phoenix and the Carpet
Amazon Price: $2.39 (as of 07/25/2008)
List Price: $2.99
The Phoenix and the Carpet
Amazon Price: $24.95 (as of 07/25/2008)
List Price: $24.95
New Guestbook
Like this lens? Want to share your feedback, or just give a thumbs up? Be the first to submit a blurb!

Fetching new data from eBay now... please stand by