Anne of Green Gables follows the irrepressible Anne Shirley, an imaginative orphan mistakenly sent to the aging Cuthbert siblings of rural Avonlea, as she transforms their household and community through wit, feeling, and moral growth. Montgomery's prose blends domestic realism, pastoral lyricism, and comic melodrama, giving Prince Edward Island an almost mythic freshness. Published in 1908, the novel belongs to traditions of girls' fiction and bildungsroman, yet it expands them by making female imagination a serious ethical and social force. Lucy Maud Montgomery drew deeply on her upbringing in Cavendish, Prince Edward Island, where landscapes, village life, Presbyterian discipline, and the emotional solitude of childhood shaped her sensibility. Like Anne, Montgomery understood the sustaining power of fantasy, language, and ambition amid constraint. Her work reflects both personal experience and the broader cultural moment in which women writers negotiated authorship, respectability, education, and independence. This novel is warmly recommended to readers seeking a classic that is both charming and intellectually rewarding. Its enduring appeal lies not merely in nostalgia, but in its subtle study of belonging, self-invention, and the civilizing power of sympathy.