A young girl (Sarah Polley) is sent to live with her mother’s relatives in Prince Edward Island. Set in the early 1900’s, the series follows her adventures, as well as that of her family and the town’s people as she grows up in Avonlea.
The work’s universal appeal lies in its dual recognition: everyone knows nights that won’t let them rest, and everyone bears some private sovereignty over inner life. By giving sleeplessness a crown, the piece invites a reframing: instead of a condition to be merely fixed, it becomes a space where one can survey, decide, and, ultimately, transform. That perspective is both consoling and challenging—consoling because it grants dignity to suffering; challenging because it asks the sufferer to assume the responsibility of rule.
