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283:(1784). This has been praised by a present-day critic as a book that "draws least attention to gaps and contradictions.... The story is episodic, as we follow the mouse Nimble through various households and overhear a variety of conversations.... This episodic, even picaresque, form effectively naturalizes—defuses—potential inconsistency." Other titles of hers included
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in 1787 and to
Dorothy's father's house at Maryland Point in 1789. Predeceased by most of her family, Dorothy became an invalid after a back injury in 1817, and her mind became unhinged in her later years, but she was looked after by her niece Frances and her grand-niece Maria. She died on 5 February
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Dorothy Kilner published anonymously at first and then under the successive pseudonyms of M. P. and Mary Pelham, in line with general practice for female authors in that period. "M. P." may have referred to her home town of
Maryland Point. Both she and her sister-in-law were published by the London
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as the youngest of five children of Thomas Kilner (1719–1804), public servant and landowner, and his wife, Frances, née
Ayscough (1718–1768). The family moved to
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and helped to bring up their five children. Both
Dorothy and Mary Ann became prolific writers of books for children. The family moved to
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Copies of the books of
Dorothy and Mary Ann were found long after their deaths in a trunk in their Maryland Point home.
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Kilner wrote clearly and well, but in an age when the moral side of children's literature still predominated. So
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Beverley Lyon Clark, "Reconstructing
Dorothy Kilner: Anecdotes as Antidotes in Project Muse". Project Muse
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A Collection of
Entertaining Histories for the Instruction and Amusement of All Good Children
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Kilner was much inspired by a friendship that began in childhood with Mary Ann Maze (
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Anecdotes of a
Boarding School, or an antidote to the vices of those Establishments
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Several titles of Kilner's titles continued to be reprinted for many years.
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with a strong knowledge of children's character. Her best known work was
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Cambridge
History of English and American Literature
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341:Patricia Wright: Kilner, Dorothy (1755–1836). In:
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