Elizabeth Goudge has written at least 42 books. Their most popular book is The little white horse with 29 saves with an average rating of 3.91⭐.
They are best known for writing in the genres Adventure, Classics, and Fiction.
Elizabeth de Beauchamp Goudge was born on 24 April 1900 in the cathedral city of Wells, where her father, a clergyman, was vice-principal of the Theological College. When she was a child, the family moved to Ely and then to Oxford. Elizabeth attended Grassendale School and studied art at University College Reading. She went on to teach design and handicrafts in Ely and Oxford. Her first book, The Fairies' Baby and Other Stories (1919) was considered unsuccessful, but her first novel, Island Magic (1934) was an immediate hit. She was a best-selling author in both the UK and the USA from the 1930s through the 1970s. Elizabeth Goudge won the annual Carnegie Medal from the Library Association for The Little White Horse in 1946; it inspired the British television mini-series Moonacre and the film The Secret of Moonacre. Green Dolphin Country (1944) was adapted as a film in 1948 under the title Green Dolphin Street. After her mother's death in 1951, Elizabeth Goudge moved to a cottage on Peppard Common, just outside Henley-on-Thames, where she lived for the last 30 years of her life. She became a founding member of the Romantic Novelists' Association in 1960 and later served as vice president. She died on 1 April 1984.
1946 • 29 Readers • 286 pages • 3.9
1944 • 5 Readers • 767 pages
1960 • 4 Readers • 383 pages • 5
1964 • 3 Readers • 256 pages
1970 • 2 Readers • 736 pages
1963 • 2 Readers • 285 pages
#1 of 2 in The Eliots of Damerosehay
1940 • 2 Readers • 286 pages • 4
2 Readers
2 Readers • 2
2013 • 1 Reader • 306 pages
2013 • 1 Reader
1 Reader • 4
1949 • 1 Reader • 317 pages
2015 • 1 Reader • 377 pages
1951 • 1 Reader • 255 pages
2014 • 1 Reader • 270 pages
1959 • 1 Reader
1949 • 1 Reader • 393 pages
1 Reader • 3
1 Reader
1940 • 1 Reader • 207 pages
1956 • 334 pages
1941 • 255 pages
1967 • 222 pages
1946 • 248 pages