Caroline Fraser
Författare till Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder
Om författaren
Foto taget av: Macmillan
Verk av Caroline Fraser
Land of My Fater 1 exemplar
Associerade verk
Laura Ingalls Wilder: The Little House Books, Volume 2 (Library of America) (2012) — Redaktör — 99 exemplar
Taggad
Allmänna fakta
- Födelsedag
- 20th Century
- Kön
- female
- Nationalitet
- USA
- Födelseort
- Seattle, Washington, USA
- Bostadsorter
- Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
- Utbildning
- Harvard University (PhD | English Literature)
- Relationer
- Espen, Hal (husband)
Medlemmar
Recensioner
Listor
Priser
Du skulle kanske också gilla
Statistik
- Verk
- 4
- Även av
- 2
- Medlemmar
- 1,304
- Popularitet
- #19,682
- Betyg
- 4.3
- Recensioner
- 82
- ISBN
- 24
- Proberstenar
- 50
The lives of small-time farmers that were venerated in the books of Laura Ingalls Wilder contain a bitter truth: there is no way to make a living on the prairie without government aid (rarely forthcoming) or tens of thousands of dollars already in your bank account. And the dark secret of the "Little House" series is that the Ingalls family did not make it. Charles and Caroline repeatedly took chances with their money, their labor, and the safety of their children, and none of those chances paid off; they never did make it as farmers on the prairie. Once Laura marries and has started a life of her own there is hope that circumstances will ease, but she has quite the daddy complex and marries a man just like Charles: one determined to be a farmer in a part of the country that is too arid to sustain crops, and one who is a spendthrift to boot. Life is grim and stays that way, and eventually a daughter named Rose grows up to cause a whole host of problems.
For readers who grew up on the "Little House" books (as I did) this book is scandalous and fascinating and touching and grim. The author is thorough and precise in the details, and gives much-needed context to a life that we all thought we knew. A must-read.
Merged review:
Grim.
The lives of small-time farmers that were venerated in the books of Laura Ingalls Wilder contain a bitter truth: there is no way to make a living on the prairie without government aid (rarely forthcoming) or tens of thousands of dollars already in your bank account. And the dark secret of the "Little House" series is that the Ingalls family did not make it. Charles and Caroline repeatedly took chances with their money, their labor, and the safety of their children, and none of those chances paid off; they never did make it as farmers on the prairie. Once Laura marries and has started a life of her own there is hope that circumstances will ease, but she has quite the daddy complex and marries a man just like Charles: one determined to be a farmer in a part of the country that is too arid to sustain crops, and one who is a spendthrift to boot. Life is grim and stays that way, and eventually a daughter named Rose grows up to cause a whole host of problems.
For readers who grew up on the "Little House" books (as I did) this book is scandalous and fascinating and touching and grim. The author is thorough and precise in the details, and gives much-needed context to a life that we all thought we knew. A must-read.… (mer)