Please do note that this here and frustrating one star rating is not in ANY manner, in ANY way meant to be a negative or critical comment on L.M. Montgomery's fiction, on her writing in and of itself (as for the most part, the included stories featured in Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories: 1905-1906) generally deserve from three to five stars), but solely on the annoyingly and supremely user-unfriendly way in which Dodo Press has presented and published them.
Now when I first became aware of the Dodo Press Montgomery short stories series (six books in all) I was excited, because from the presented titles it appeared as though the tales would hopefully (and I was actually counting on likely) be arranged chronologically. However, while the short fiction contained in Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories: 1905-1906 are indeed those stories penned by L.M. Montgomery from 1905-1906, the actual tales and anecdotes themselves seem to have been arranged rather in random (and therefore not in chronological) order. So if you were, if you are looking forward to finally being able to read L.M. Montgomery's short stories in actual order of time specific appearance, this fact will make your desire considerably more difficult to achieve.
However and the above having been said, what I personally find even more problematic with regard to this here compilation (as well as with ALL of the other volumes in the Dodo Press L.M. Montgomery Short Stories series), is the lack of ANY type of usable table of contents. For while both the stories and their dates of appearance are listed (albeit in random order) at the beginning of the book, Dodo Press somehow and strangely has then not deemed it necessary to also supply the actual starting pages for the stories. And therefore, if you desire to read a particular story, or if you are actually trying to read the tales chronologically (in order of actual date of appearance), you will need to guess on which page a given piece of fiction in fact and indeed commences. And truthfully, I really do not even remotely understand why Dodo Press could not have arranged the stories by year and month of appearance, and it is simply unacceptable that the table of contents is so user-unfriendly (as not supplying the starting pages of the stories, sorry, but for me that is an almost unforgivable and massively anger-producing shortcoming and makes Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories: 1905-1906 really only enjoyable and useful if you basically start at the beginning and then read straight through, as trying to flip through pages upon pages to guess where a certain and particular tale starts is both tediously time consuming and really also totally annoying).
And furthermore, the Dodo Press L.M. Montgomery short stories collections are also not going to be of much if ANY use to and for those readers wishing to utilise the books for academic (read research) based purposes, as there are neither introductions nor is any of the source material listed. Now presented introductions would have been beneficial (appreciated), but also not really absoultely required, but Dodo Press should really have listed the diverse magazines, journals etc. in which these stories originally appeared. Now I still enjoyed the reading time spent with and on Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories: 1905-1906, but the set-up is certainly a major disappointment, and I feel that I should at least warn other fans of L.M. Montgomery's fiction about the many shortcomings of this particular series. And while I do now realise that Dodo Press has probably just taken these stories from free online sites such As Project Gutenberg, that still does NOT in any way excuse the user unfriendly print format I have encountered.
And yes, I could just as easily (and of course also much more cheaply) have downloaded the featured L.M. Montgomery tales from Project Gutenberg and then formatted them myself. However, since I obtained this Dodo Press series as traditional paper format printed books (and they were also a much appreciated gift), I can and do (or at least I should be able to) expect a reader and user friendly format, and this simply does not ever materialise. And potential readers should also be aware that ALL of the Dodo Press books of L.M. Montgomery's short stories do seem to have the exact same issues, are similarly constructed (random chronological order, a patently unusable table of contents and with no publication information, period). And frankly, if you are indeed actively interested in L.M. Montgomery's short fiction, you should probably either download them from free online sources (there are many possibilities, from Project Gutenberg to even various Kindle and other e-book freebies), or much better yet (in my humble opinion), seriously consider the late great Rea Wilmshurt's spectacular collection (the eight books might not contain every short story L.M. Montgomery ever penned, but the individual tomes are extensive, thematic, beautifully structured, and ALWAYS do include an introduction as well as the relevant source materials and available publication information).