On the Banks of the Bayou
by Roger Lea MacBride
Little House: The Rose Years (7), Little House Novels, Chronological Order (The Rose Years — book 39)
On This Page
Description
When Rose moves to Louisiana to live with her aunt Eliza Jane to finish high school, she is exposed to new cultures, politics, and ways of life.Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
In the seventh volume of Little House: The Rose Years, Rose Wilder spreads her wings and spends a school year with her aunt down in Crowley, Louisiana. Those months serve to expand her social consciousness as she experiences life in a bigger city, with different types of people. On one hand, I missed all of the familiar and lovable characters from the previous books. Part of me mourned as Rose drifted away from her parents' values and lifestyles. But on the other hand, I am a child of the 20th Century. I can relate to many of her feelings. And there's the pure fun of exploring life in Louisiana through Rose's eyes. This one's a volume to check out even if you haven't been following the series.
--J.
--J.
After the last couple books feeling like more of the same, this book was refreshingly different. Rose travels to Louisiana to live with her aunt and finish high school. She makes new friends, learns, and starts to grow up.
The downsides of this book were that the politics were (once again) rather invasive and the scenes rather disconnected. I think that these two problems are related. The problem with the politics was not that they were there; it was that they felt like an add on. But then, to some degree, everything in the book felt like an add on. I suspect that, since this book was completed after the author's death, it is more of a raw compilation of the anecdotes the author had heard from Rose than those anecdotes woven into a show more story like the early books in the series. show less
The downsides of this book were that the politics were (once again) rather invasive and the scenes rather disconnected. I think that these two problems are related. The problem with the politics was not that they were there; it was that they felt like an add on. But then, to some degree, everything in the book felt like an add on. I suspect that, since this book was completed after the author's death, it is more of a raw compilation of the anecdotes the author had heard from Rose than those anecdotes woven into a show more story like the early books in the series. show less
A whole new world opens up for Rose Wilder when she leaves Rocky Ridge Farm and moves to Louisiana to live with her aunt Eliza Jane. Rose is sixteen now, and she thrives in a city brimming with excitement and adventure. Rose even finds herself becoming an independent young woman with her own ideas, ambitions, and dreams.
Rose visits her aunt Eliza Jane to spend a year in Louisiana going to high school. She finds herself awash in new experiences- she learns three years of Latin in one, gets a beau, makes friends, and develops political beliefs. She becomes valedictorian, and comes home grown up.
love this series!!!!
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- On the Banks of the Bayou
- Original publication date
- 1998
- People/Characters
- Rose Wilder Lane; Eliza Jane Wilder
- Important places
- Crowley, Louisiana, USA
- First words
- Rose gripped the edge of her chair seat to steady herself.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)She knew this much: It would never be the way it had been when she left.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 694
- Popularity
- 40,973
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.57)
- Languages
- Danish, English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 11
- ASINs
- 3






























































