Surprisingly for a popular and prolific author, little is known of Farrow's life. A few sparse facts can be gleaned from prefaces to his books: that he owned an armchair called Pendennis, had a dog called Gip, and was known to his friends as "Gef". It can be inferred, perhaps, from the prefaces, in which he repeatedly begged for readers' letters, that he was lonely and childless. The frequency with which he changed publishers points to dissatisfaction with the terms they offered. Until recently, even the year of his birth was not known for certain, it having been estimated at 1866, partly based on a reference in the Preface to an 1898 book: :One of my correspondents, aged eight, has embarrassed me very much indeed by suggesting that I should "wait for her till she grows up," as she should "so like to marry a gentleman who told stories." I hope she didn't mean that I did anything so disgraceful; and besides, as it would take nearly twenty-five years for her to catch up to me, she
might change her mind in that time, and then what would become of me? What
did become of Farrow is also obscure. Author
Noel Streatfeild has speculated: :I think he must have met a
Snark who turned out to be a Boojum, for he certainly has "softly and suddenly vanished away." Farrow's other books include
The Missing Prince (1896) and ''The Little Panjandrum's Dodo'' (1899). ==References==