Technically speaking, this is really two books - a selection of short stories by Anne Thackeray Ritchie, Christina Rosetti, Mrs. Molesworth, and E. Nesbit and a fantasy novel reprinted in its entirety by Jean Ingellow, Mopsa the Fairy. If Lewis Carroll and/or George MacDonald are the only way you know Victorian children's literature, than this really is a great introduction to the wider world of it. Both MacDonald and Carroll tended to idealize little girls (Carroll moreso, and even he wasn't as guilty of it as Hans Christian Andersen), and these authors do not take that track - instead they write of childhoods more gritty and realistic, even as most of the stories involve retellings of folk or fairy tales or other fantasy elements. The contrast between Mopsa and Jack in Ingellow's novel perhaps shows this best as she grows up much faster than him and must take on responsibilities akin to those girls were expected to do while Jack returns from Fairyland and forgets all, going back to a blissful childhood. These are harsher (especially Rosetti's) than you might expect from the era that brought us the notion that childhood is sacred, but as Mark Twain said, "Sacred cows make the best hamburgers."