author
Best known for early-20th-century books that introduced young readers to life in other countries, this writer blended storytelling with simple cultural observation. Her work also reached beyond children's fiction into arts writing, showing a wider curiosity about music and culture.
Luna May Ennis was an early-20th-century author whose books are now preserved by projects like Project Gutenberg and listed by The Online Books Page. The works most clearly associated with her include Our Little Danish Cousin, Our Little Boer Cousin, and Music in Art.
Her best-known books for younger readers fit the style of educational storytelling popular in that era: they used the daily life of a child in another place to introduce customs, family life, and local history in an approachable way. That mix of narrative and cultural description helped make her work both readable and informative for young audiences.
The available public information about Ennis appears to be quite limited, so many personal biographical details are hard to confirm. Even so, her surviving books suggest a writer interested in helping readers learn about the wider world, and they remain of interest today as examples of children's literature and cultural writing from their time.