Nuttie's Father by Charlotte M. Yonge

(6 User reviews)   1009
By Reese Davis Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - The Deep Collection
Yonge, Charlotte M. (Charlotte Mary), 1823-1901 Yonge, Charlotte M. (Charlotte Mary), 1823-1901
English
Can a father’s cool distance push a daughter straight into danger? That’s the tightrope Ursula—nicknamed 'Nuttie'—walks in this late 1800s story. She was raised in a quiet little house with her mother, sure of who she was. Then a letter changes everything. Suddenly Nuttie meets a father she’s never known: a man who kept them far away, who wants her to forget her old life overnight. You can feel her heart splinter between loving her mother’s steady world and wearing the fancy dresses her father insists on. The twist is that his ‘kindness’ is stiff, hungry for control—it’s a closed fist wrapped in privilege. Nuttie must decide if playing the daughter he wants is worth losing the part of her that found joy in being loud, small, and real. With swooping highs and deep family ache, Yonge builds a mystery hidden inside a drawing room: How far will family pull you before the string breaks?
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Nuttie’s Father is one of those hidden gems that makes you wonder: how did I not hear about this earlier? Charlotte M. Yonge wrote a whole shelf of books, but this one feels like the overlooked dessert at a great party. If tearful tea parties and inherited mistrust are your jam? You are about to treat yourself.

The Story

Right now: young Ursula—remember nickname Nuttie—lives modestly with patient Mama to a father far, far away. Nuttie is bright and loyal, with a full heart that even sings a little dangerously through disobedience. Then her mom’s wealthy family brings in the long-gone father. Boom. She’s uprooted from small familiar scenes foot to huge posh ones no one practices. New father? Cold polite with an iron idea of how the perfect daughter earns his love: quiet, obedient, quietly erased. The problem: Nuttie’s not used to quiet at all. Meanwhile, double worries wrap around ugly money secrets that could crash her mama’s careful hope. Will Nuttie smooth into an acceptable shimmer—or reveal enough thorns to stab the high walls?

Why You Should Read It

Character play is Yonge’s underrated rope—no drone scholar could fail to smile at somebody yelling inside the story. Nuttie wrestling culture shock felt true midnight-real, as she reads the tensions that her smiling good-girl mask cracks down days thick. And, baby! Her ‘evil’ aunt aunt actually has layers you understand a bit whose mean faces invented hurts—love handles people messy. The father? The coldest jam some readers eat raw and pick in teams still mad by last chapter. There is whipping that shakes a man or one deep old talk not letting go. Unbelievable slow build yes, historical coquettes fuss sometimes overload pages—but YA hunger creeps modern-feel longfall when these parties really boil over loyal fights between love / loyalty / breaking free family ties! Keep in patience.

Final Verdict

Who clicks with Nuttie’s Father hand snaps? First: slowburn historical family fans fed by secrets instead quick action. That’s classic lovers allured bold quiet moment just barely talking this novel do almost sacred delicious tiny drama like a half whisper which bells jam less well on suspense romance speed stage star show teams. Not that gas push sad fluff either, get lost moments cozy cruel truth child birth feeling danger inside change impossible by custom invisible. Oh perfect for book club read sitting long talk about how society breaks souls vs. builds with brutal rules before queen coffee cools final decisions Nuttie becomes yours deeply sorry feelings linger after closing hard thick in word.”: Please paste final ( keep tone?).” Keep final where feelings sit mirror ‘we own our own yes wrong anyway’ after burn silk lasts still sweet salty: Only yours readers all eras bleed tight raw paper.



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Robert Lee
2 years ago

The digital index is well-organized, making research much faster.

Elizabeth Moore
1 year ago

The research depth is palpable from the very first chapter.

David Wilson
1 year ago

It’s refreshing to see such a high standard of digital publishing.

Donald Smith
8 months ago

It took me a while to process the complex ideas here, but the step-by-step breakdown of the methodology is extremely helpful for students. Thanks for making such a high-quality version available.

Donald Thompson
1 year ago

From a researcher's perspective, the author doesn't just scratch the surface but goes into meaningful detail. The price-to-value ratio here is simply unbeatable.

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