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Loading... Little House on the Prairieby Laura Ingalls WilderSeries: Original Little House Series (2), Little House novels, chronological order (book 17)
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This book is about a family that travels by horse drawn covered wagon to find a new place to live. Along they way they encounter many obsticals such as wild animals, and sickness. The story has many lessons to be learned such as how hard life used to be. I love these books. I read them when I was in Middle School and I watched the TV program every night that it was on. Laura is awesome! I loved Pa too. This book would be a good opener to studying the way life was back then. How settlers came to claim land to start a new life. How life was for the natives and the settlers. Great history leasons could come from this book. I try to read a book from this series or the Green Gables series concurrently with other books. It reminds me of my childhood. At the beginning of this story, Pa Ingalls decides to sell the house in the Big Woods of Wisconsin, and move to the Indian Territory near Kansas. Laura, Pa, Ma, and Mary and baby Carrie, move to Kansas. During the book, the Ingalls family becomes terribly ill from a disease called at that time "Fever 'n' Ague" later referred to as malaria. Mrs. Scott, another neighbor, takes care of the family while they are sick. Mr. Edwards, another neighbor, brings the children Christmas presents. In the spring the family plants a small farm and make Kansas their home. At the end of the book the family is told that the land must be vacated by settlers as it is not legally open to settlement yet, and Pa elects to leave the land and move before the Army forcibly requires him to abandon the land. Mary, Laura, and their family travel across the US in a covered wagon in search of a new home. Along the way, they learn how to survive the harsh prairie wilds, and experience the joys and tragedies of staking out a claim in new lands. no reviews | add a review
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The adventures continue for Laura Ingalls and her family as they leave their little house in the Big Woods of Wisconsin and set out for Kansas. They travel for many days in their covered wagon until they find the best spot to build their little house on the prairie. Soon they are planting and plowing, hunting wild ducks and turkeys, and gathering grass for their cows. Sometimes pioneer life is hard, but Laura and her folks are always busy and happy in their new little house.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:23 -0400)
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What I do like about this book is the quite contentedness with the every day. There is no need to be ‘entertained’ something that I think is all to prevalent in today’s society. I felt a great calm reading this book.
I also love Garth Williams drawings in my copy. They are so beautifully done.
Laura was a childhood heroine of mine. I wanted to be like her. She wasn’t always good (neither was I). She had adventures (looking back now so did I). Thinking about my childhood heroines they were often like Laura. A bit of a free spirit. Not ladylike, wanting to be in the thick of things and very curious about everything. That was me. (