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Character sketch of Anne from "Anne of Green Gables"

Summary:

Anne Shirley, the protagonist of Anne of Green Gables, is an imaginative, talkative, and spirited orphan with a flair for the dramatic. Despite her tough early life, she remains optimistic and passionate, often getting into trouble due to her impulsiveness. Anne's vivid imagination and strong sense of individuality endear her to the residents of Avonlea, transforming their lives as much as they transform hers.

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Can you provide a character sketch of Anne from "Anne of Green Gables"?

Anne Shirley is the title character of L. M. Montgomery's 1908 novel Anne of Green GablesThere are eight books in the series. 

Anne Shirley is an orphan who comes to Prince Edward Island to live with Marilla and Matthew Cuthbert. She is an immediate disappointment because they wanted a boy to help with chores around the farm, but she is lively, intelligent, talkative and engaging. She charms Matthew on the ride home, but Marilla requires more convincing. 

Anne has wild red hair and has the temperament often associated with redheads. She is a very spirited individual. She's strong willed, though she wants to be obedient. She is happy and grateful, but she is given to fits of temper. She is a good friend, though many of her peers are a challenge and a burr to her. It is this combination of paradoxes that makes her believable and sympathetic as...

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a character. One of her catchphrases is "fodder for the imagination," and Anne can find this in almost anything. She is highly imaginative. 

She doesn't have the same upbringing as her peers and it is difficult for her to assimilate into the nuanced social customs of the people of Prince Edward Island, and so she makes many mistakes. But, she is always penitent and eager to learn the right way to behave. This flawed nature and desire to do the right thing have, in my opinion, made her one of the most beloved characters in literature for over one hundred years. 

As the series progresses, Anne changes and matures into a young woman, which mellows her passions and changes her perspectives. But at her core, she remains the good-natured, curious and lovable Anne Shirley we first meet on the road to Green Gables. 

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How can I write a character sketch of Anne from Anne of Green Gables?

In order to write a character sketch of Anne Shirley, the protagonist of Lucy Maud Montgomery's novel, Anne of Green Gables, one should go through the book and write down the passages in which Anne describes herself, of which there are many. In addition to being a lively, imaginative, quirky, talkative, dramatic person, the character of Anne is also much given to self-reflection. She remarks that: "There's such a lot of different Annes in me. I sometimes think that is why I'm such a troublesome person. If I was just the one Anne it would be ever so much more comfortable, but then it wouldn't be half so interesting." Anne links her conflicted nature to her physiognomy as well as her temperament, and frequently mentions her red hair as evidence of her fiery nature. "You'd find it easier to be bad than good if you had red hair," she remarks, adding that "People who haven't red hair don't know what trouble is." LM Montgomery uses the strategy of creating internal conflict and external pathos (we first meet Anne as an orphan) in order to generate sympathy for her. She uses Anne's facility for getting in trouble through her imaginative schemes in order to generate interest in Anne's feelings and relationships.

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