Monday, December 15, 2025

124. Little House in the Big Woods


124. Little House in the Big Woods. Laura Ingalls Wilder. 1932. 238 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, children's classic, j historical, audio book]

First sentence: Once upon a time, sixty years ago, a little girl lived in the Big Woods of Wisconsin, in a little gray house made of logs.

Premise/plot: Little House in the Big Woods is the first in an autobiographical FICTION series by Laura Ingalls Wilder. Laura Ingalls Wilder is sharing her vivid memories of childhood starting with her Wisconsin years. She writes of Pa, Ma, Mary, and baby Carrie. She writes of grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. She writes of chores, chores, and more chores. She writes of story and song. So many chapters of this one feature an extra-bonus story. Laura recalling Pa recalling a story from his own past, a story from his father's past, a story from his grandfather's past. This one really does capture many of the five senses--the sights, sounds, smells, tastes, etc. of her childhood. It is a personal story, though probably not unique. She is writing of "sixty years ago," a way of life then past, a way of life falling out of [collective] memory perhaps, a way of life that can only be memorialized (is that the right word???) in family stories. Every family has stories. Not all families pass along the stories throughout the generations. The book is an act of love. 

My thoughts:  The series is not without controversy. I know that. You know that. We've lived long enough that Laura Ingalls Wilder--for better or worse--has fallen out of fashion, out of style. At best she's seen as quaint. At worst, well, a racist. I do think Little House in the Big Woods may be the least problematic in the series. The possible offenders being Ma baking a type of bread called "Rye n' Injun bread" and Pa singing a line in a song with the word darky. (The bread is made from rye flour and corn meal.) 

I appreciated many things about this one. I love all the snapshots of day-to-day simple life. I love the snapshots of special memories--like the Christmas chapter, or the one where they go to visit family and make candy. I love the focus on family, on storytelling, on tradition. I wouldn't say the book is overly faith-forward or religious, yet, I think in some ways faith provides the skeleton--the structure--beneath. 

I do read it differently the older I get. Here is the last paragraph that hit me right in the heart:

She thought to herself, "This is now."
She was glad that the cosy house, and Pa and Ma and the firelight and the music, were now. They could not be forgotten, she thought, because now is now. It can never be a long time ago.

Very true to life, in my opinion.



© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

123. The Blue Castle



123. The Blue Castle. L.M. Montgomery. 1926. 218 pages. [Audio book, Library, 5 Stars]


First sentence: If it had not rained on a certain May morning Valancy Stirling's whole life would have been entirely different. She would have gone, with the rest of her clan, to Aunt Wellington's engagement picnic and Dr. Trent would have gone to Montreal. But it did rain and you shall hear what happened because of it.

The Blue Castle is a giddy-making romance by one of my favorite authors, L.M. Montgomery. I LOVE so many of Montgomery's books, but this one is one of my favorite favorites. One of those perfectly perfect books. For readers who don't appreciate old-fashioned, sweet romances, it may not be exceptional. But for me, it is near perfect! 

Valancy Stirling is the heroine. An uncomfortable birthday is approaching, and she's never been in love, never even come close to falling in love. She hates the teasing she receives from her family because of her unmarried status. Hates it not only because it's rude, but because she longs for love, and aches for a happily ever after. She hates how everyone takes her for granted, how no one ever shows her any real consideration.

So one day Valancy decides to go to a doctor--a man who was not the official family doctor--with her symptoms of heart pain and palpitations. A family emergency calls the doctor away before he can share his diagnosis with her, but a letter arrives in the mail a few days letter, a letter with shocking news. SHE IS DYING. There are two things Valancy decides: 1) she will never, ever tell her family the news and 2) she will make all her own decisions and will start LIVING each day as if it were her very last.

The change in Valancy is oh-so-sudden and oh-so-shocking. The new Valancy has a voice, a loud voice, and a rebellious spirit. She will do things her way from now on. One of the first decisions she makes is that she will nurse a dying relative, Cissy, who is in disgrace with the family. She will keep house for "Roaring Abel." It is in her new position that she first meets Barney Snaith. And it is LOVE. The old Valancy would never have met him, would never have dared talk to him, but the new Valancy? Well, she has NOTHING to lose! So the two become friends--good friends. After Cissy's death, Valancy decides to take a big risk:
"I thought I'd run down and ask if there was anything I could do for you," said Barney.
Valancy took it with a canter.
"Yes, there is something you can do for me," she said, evenly and distinctly. "Will you marry me?"
For a moment Barney was silent. There was no particular expression on his face. Then he gave an odd laugh.
"Come, now! I knew luck was just waiting around the corner for me. All the signs have been pointing that way today."
"Wait." Valancy lifted her hand. "I'm in earnest--but I want to get my breath after that question. Of course, with my bringing up, I realize perfectly well that this is one of the things 'a lady should not do.'"
"But why--why?"
"For two reasons." Valancy was still a little breathless, but she looked Barney straight in the eyes while all the dead Stirlings revolved rapidly in their graves and the living ones did nothing because they did not know that Valancy was at that moment proposing lawful marriage to the notorious Barney Snaith. "The first reason is, I--I"--Valancy tried to say "I love you" but could not. She had to take refuge in a pretended flippancy. "I'm crazy about you. the second is--this."
She handed him Dr. Trent's letter.
Barney opened it with the air of a man thankful to find some safe, sane thing to do. As he read it his face changed. He understood--perhaps more than Valancy wanted him to.
"Are you sure nothing can be done for you?"
Valancy did not misunderstand the question.
"Yes. You know Dr. Trent's reputation in regard to heart disease. I haven't long to live--perhaps only a few months--a few weeks. I want to live them. I can't go back to Deerwood--you know what my life was like there. And"--she managed it this time--"I love you. I want to spend the rest of my life with you. That's all." (127, 128)
Will Barney say yes?! Will Valancy have her one happy year of real living, of JOY?

I adore this book! I love the romance. I love the characterization. I love the descriptive writing!

Favorite quotes:
Valancy never persisted. She was afraid to.
They never knew that Valancy had two homes--the ugly red brick box of a home, on Elm Street, and the Blue Castle in Spain. Valancy had lived spiritually in the Blue Castle ever since she could remember...
Reality pressed on her too hardly, barking at her heels like a maddening little dog.
Dr. Trent was over seventy and there had been rumours that he meant to retire soon. None of the Stirling clan had ever gone to him since he had told Cousin Gladys, ten years before, that her neuritis was all imaginary and that she enjoyed it. You couldn't patronise a doctor who insulted your first-cousin-once-removed like that--not to mention that he was a Presbyterian when all the Stirlings went to the Anglican church. But Valancy, between the devil of disloyalty to clan and the deep sea of fuss and clatter and advice, thought she would take a chance with the devil.
Fear--fear--fear--she could never escape from it. It bound her and enmeshed her like a spider's web of steel.
"Fear is the original sin," wrote John Foster. "Almost all the evil in the world has its origin in the fact that some one is afraid of something. It is a cold, slimy serpent coiling about you. It is horrible to live with fear; and it is of all things degrading."
"'If you can sit in silence with a person for half an hour and yet be entirely comfortable, you and that person can be friends. If you cannot, friends you'll never be and you need not waste time in trying.'"




© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Week in Review #50



This week I read three books.

122. Anne of Windy Poplars. L.M. Montgomery. 1936. 288 pages. [Source: Bought] [4 stars, classic]

Read this if...

  • You love Anne Shirley
  • You love classics
  • You love L.M. Montgomery


80. Spirit-Filled Singing. Ryanne J. Molinari. 2025. 208 pages. [Source: Review copy] [4 stars, Christinan nonfiction, worship]

Read this if...

  • You are a church musician



81. Christmas in Wisconsin. Linda Byler. 2025. 240 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, Christmas, Christian romance, Christian fiction]

Read this if...

  • You enjoy Amish fiction
  • You enjoy Amish Christmas stories
  • You don't mind all TELL and no SHOW


Century of Viewing #50

1950s

  • 1954 White Christmas. I can't imagine anyone not knowing White Christmas, but perhaps there are some out there who do need a summary. Two soldiers-turned-showmen put on a huge Christmas show to honor their former general all the while falling in love with two sisters in show business.


1960s

  • 1965 Charlie Brown Christmas. I love, love, love this one! Definitely worth watching every year. LINUS does know the true meaning of Christmas.
1970s
  • 1974 Twas the Night Before Christmas. This is a short animated cartoon--musical, of course. I remember it fondly from childhood.
  • 1978 Christmas Eve on Sesame Street. Love Big Bird ice skating. SO many great scenes and songs. The main premise is that OSCAR tells Big Bird that Santa can't get down chimneys and so there will be no Christmas. Also Bert and Ernie do The Gift of the Magi, but Mr. Hooper saves the day.


1980s

  • 1985 Velveteen Rabbit. I wanted to love this one, but, the animation wasn't for me. But the story is always good.
  • 1986 The Christmas Toy. Jim Henson's The Christmas Toy to be exact. This one has toys in a toy room preparing for the new Christmas toy. They know that the child will temporarily at least reject the old and prefer the new. But this one is about the friendship between toys. It's a GOOD movie.
  • 1987 Muppet Family Christmas. IF you haven't watched The Muppet Family Christmas do it now, now, now! This one is all kinds of awesome. It brings together the Muppets, the Fraggles, and the Sesame Street gang.
  • 1987 Garfield Christmas. One of my favorite, favorite, favorite Christmas specials.
  • 1988 Die Hard. A Christmas party goes terribly wrong and it's up to one man and one sympathetic cop to try to save the day.

2010s

  • 2012 12 Disasters of Christmas. Don't seek out this bad movie to see how bad it is. Is this the worse movie I've seen this year? NO. But honestly it's not worth your time. So an ancient Mayan prophecy is "coming true" in a small mountain town, but a chosen one is there to put on the five golden rings and save the day. This one has the '12 Days of Christmas' being a song passed down from the Mayans, I believe, as a way to keep the warning alive of the doom ahead. It's weird and also weird. And even without all the end-of-the-world stuff, I have to believe the town is WEIRD and many residents are evil.
  • 2014 The Nine Lives of Christmas. A stray cat brings a couple together. Hero-fireman doesn't 'like' cats but a cat has chosen him. Heroine-vet-student loves cats but lives in an apartment with a no-cat rule. As he seeks out her advice on how to care for his cat, they become friendly then friends then roommates when her landlord finds out about the cat. The cats fall in love first. The cats are honestly the best part of this holiday romance.


2020s

  • 2024 Team Starkid: VHS Christmas Carols. This is a musical production by Team Starkid. This mashes up three familiar stories into one awesome one: The Gift of the Magi, The Little Match Girl, and Christmas Carol. Everything is 80s themed and all kinds of awesome. HIGHLY recommend.

 

© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Monday, December 08, 2025

122. Anne of Windy Poplars


Anne of Windy Poplars. L.M. Montgomery. 1936. 288 pages. [Source: Bought]

First sentence:  DEAREST: Isn't that an address! Did you ever hear anything so delicious? Windy Poplars is the name of my new home and I love it. I also love Spook's Lane, which has no legal existence. It should be Trent Street but it is never called Trent Street except on the rare occasions when it is mentioned in the Weekly Courier . . . and then people look at each other and say, 'Where on earth is that?' Spook's Lane it is . . . although for what reason I cannot tell you. I have already asked Rebecca Dew about it, but all she can say is that it has always been Spook's Lane and there was some old yarn years ago of its being haunted. But she has never seen anything worse-looking than herself in it. 

Premise/plot: Anne and Gilbert are engaged at last! But Gilbert still has three years of school to go, and, so Anne finds herself a job as principal of a school in Summerside. Anne of Windy Poplars gives us an intimate look at those three years. Much of the book provides glimpses into the letters Anne writes Gilbert. But there are some traditional chapters as well.

My thoughts: Anne of Windy Poplars is such a delightful (late) addition to the Anne series by L.M. Montgomery. I love, love, love it. Even if Gilbert himself is absent. (We only see her letters to him, never his letters to her.)

This book showcases what Montgomery does BEST: bring her characters to life. It doesn't seem to matter if we spend two paragraphs with a character or two chapters. I CARE about every character she introduces.

Some of the characters we meet in this one: Aunt Kate, Aunt Chatty, Rebecca Dew, Dusty Miller (cats count as characters, right?!), Little Elizabeth, Nora Nelson, Jim Wilcox, Esme Taylor, Dr. Lennox Carter, Cyrus Taylor, Teddy Armstrong, Lewis Allen, Katherine Brooke, Mrs. Adoniram Gibson and Pauline, Cousin Ernestine Bugle, Jarvis Morrow, Dovie Westcott, Frank Westcott.
 

Favorite quotes:

I have a scratchy pen and I can't write love-letters with a scratchy pen...or a sharp pen...or a stub pen. So you'll only get that kind of letter from me when I have exactly the right kind of pen. 
You know I've always been one to whom adventures come unsought. I just seem to attract them, as it were.  
School begins tomorrow. I shall have to teach geometry! Surely that can't be any worse than learning it. 
Isn't it queer that the things we writhe over at night are seldom wicked things? Just humiliating ones.
I don't like reading about martyrs because they always make me feel petty and ashamed...ashamed to admit I hate to get out of bed on frosty mornings and shrink from a visit to the dentist!
Nobody is ever too old to dream. And dreams never grow old.
I said drenched and I mean drenched.
Oh, no, babies are never common," said Anne, bringing a bowl of water for Mrs. Gibson's roses. "Every one is a miracle."
It seems so strange to read over the stories of those old wars...things that can never happen again. I don't suppose any of us will ever have more than an academic interest in 'battles long ago.' It's impossible to think of Canada ever being at war again. I am so thankful that phase of history is over. 
Nobody is ever too old to wear just what she wants to wear. You wouldn't want to wear it if you were too old.


© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Saturday, December 06, 2025

Week in Review #49



This week I read three books.

121. Anne's House of Dreams. L.M. Montgomery. 1919. 227 pages. [Source: Library]

Read this if
  • you enjoy the Anne series
  • you enjoy romance
  • you enjoy classics
  • you enjoy character driven novels

78. Sea View Christmas (On Devonshire Shores) Julie Klassen. 238 pages. [Source: Review copy] [4 stars, adult romance, christian romance, historical romance, christian fiction]

Read this if
  • You enjoy historical romance
  • You enjoy series books
  • You enjoy Christian fiction


79. Unoffendable: How Just One Change Can Make All of Life Better. Brant Hansen. 2015. 214 pages. [Source: Library]

Read this if
  • You enjoy thought-provoking reads
  • You enjoy contemplative books that may or may not challenge your beliefs
  • You enjoy the discerning process to weigh each point made in a book
Century of Viewing

1930s
  • 1933 Little Women. Katharine Hepburn stars as Jo March. I enjoy this adaptation of Little Women. It is condensed and doesn't seem overly dramatic. I can make it through this adaptation without crying. Which can't be said for some of the other ones.

1940s
  • 1946 It's a Wonderful Life. I love this one. I do. I absolutely LOVE IT. I can't watch it without crying. It's impossible. Is it long? Yes. Is it too long? Probably not. But this one has all the feels, all the impact.

1970s
  • 1970 Scrooge (The Musical). I love, love, love this musical adaptation of Charles Dickens' The Christmas Carol.
  • 1976 At The Earth's Core. I've seen several 'core' movies this year. This one was BAD. Extremely very bad. I wouldn't necessarily recommend UNLESS you want some perspective and relativity. Like this movie makes other bad movies seem not so bad. So this one is set in Victorian times, it's a bit steam-punk. An adventurer is persuaded by a mad-scientist sort to take this super experimental drilling machine capsule and drill to the center of the earth. Why????? Who knows. They do. It doesn't go as planned, and much nonsense results.


1990s
  • 1990 Dark Angel (I Come In Peace). If you are looking for holiday action films OR holiday science fiction films. OR just alien invasion horror set during the holidays, then this one might work for you. Long story short, ALIENS come to earth to commit crimes and a Houston police department must try to solve this other-worldly mystery before life as we know it changes forever.
  • 1997. Borrowed Hearts. I had MAJOR doubts. But I ended up enjoying this one much more than I thought I would. A man 'hires' a wife and child for the holidays to help him with a business deal. The girl is convinced the business man (the visiting one) is an angel. (He might be, you never can tell.) They become a real family while pretending.

2000s
  • 2003. Undercover Christmas. An FBI agent takes home a witness he's protecting for the holidays....and pretends to be a couple in front of his family.....and the family ends up loving HER and so does he.
  • 2004 North and South. I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this adaptation of Elizabeth Gaskell's novel. Is it perfect? NO. Do I love the book even more? YES. But I enjoy this one very much.
  • 2004 Surviving Love. This one is dramatic and character-driven....not completely unlike the original Poseidon Adventure. A couple that is in the middle of divorcing is stranded in an RV camper in the mountains DURING A BLIZZARD. Will they be found in time? With little provision for an extended trip and extreme weather situations, will this bring them closer together?
  • 2005 The Poseidon Adventure Mini-Series. Two part adaptation of the seventies film. It was....I don't know that horrible or dreadful is the right word. Completely and totally unnecessary does come to mind. It was like take everything great about the original, and replace it with 872 dramatic side stories that add nothing but nonsense to the film. The original works because of the relationships between the characters--the tension and strife, the growing inter-dependence, the developing trust, the trauma-bonding, the dialogue, the sharing and caring. The movie is dramatic, but, the characters make it even more so. This movie was a waste. Because the characters don't matter and the drama is too over the top to keep you hooked.

2010s
  • 2017 Holiday Inn (Broadway) I love, love, love this one. More than the original? No. About the same as the original? YES. So a lot of things have been changed, but, some things remain the same. HIGHLY recommend the original 1942 film and the Broadway adaptation.
  • 2018 Hope at Christmas. An extremely predictable holiday romance--Hallmark of course--and nothing surprising happens at all. It was enjoyable enough. Enjoyable enough is better than painful or dull.


1920sGenre(s)
The Mechanical Man science fiction, robots, crime
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hydescience fiction, crime, horror
Man From Beyondparanormal, romance,




1930sGenre(s)
Frankensteinscience fiction, mad scientist, monster, horror
Bride of Frankensteinscience fiction, mad scientist, monster, horror
Just Imaginescience fiction, musical, romantic comedy, slapstick
The Invisible Manscience fiction, mad scientist, crime, horror,
Draculahorror, vampires, based on book
Little Womenadapted from book, drama, romance
1940sGenre(s)
The Bishop's Wifeangels, Christmas, romance, drama
Without Reservationsromantic comedy
Eyes in the Nightmystery, DOG, detective, world war II
Holiday Innmusical, romantic comedy, Christmas
The Perfect Womancomedy, science fiction, robots, romance
It's a Wonderful Lifedrama, Christmas,
1950sGenre(s)
The Day the Earth Stood Stillscience fiction, aliens, robots,
Belle of New Yorkmusical, romance, period drama
King Dinosaurscience fiction, space travel, exploring planets,
Good Morning, Miss Dovedrama,
The Thing From Another Worldscience fiction, aliens, horror,
1960sGenre(s)
The Earth Dies Screamingscience fiction, aliens, robots
Dinosaurusscience fiction, dinosaurs, prehistoric man,
The Time Machinescience fiction, dystopia, futuristic, adapted from book
Angry Red Planetscience fiction, space travel, aliens


1970sGenre(s)
Logan's Runscience fiction, dystopia, future
Poseidon Adventuredrama, survival, action, natural disasters
Beyond Poseidon Adventuredrama, survival, action, bad guys, plutonium
Monty Python and the Holy Grailcomedy, slapstick, musical
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factorymusical, comedy
Land that Time Forgotfantasy, dinosaurs, drama, prehistoric man
Soylent Greenscience fiction, dystopia, future
The Cat From Outer Spacescience fiction, aliens, comedy
Scroogemusical, Christmas
At the Earth's Corescience fiction, dinosaurs
1980sGenre(s)
Philadelphia Experimentscience fiction, time travel, war
Escape from New Yorkaction, dystopia, thriller
Something Wicked This Way Comesfantasy, horror, spooky carnivals
Lethal Weaponaction, crime, holiday, drama
Lethal Weapon 2action, crime, drama
High Spiritscomedy, slapstick, romance
Planes, Trains, and Automobilescomedy, drama, road trip, Thanksgiving
Claymation Christmasholiday special
Nightflyersscience fiction, aliens, horror, evil computers
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrialscience fiction, drama, aliens
1990sGenre(s)
Wing Commanderscience fiction, space wars, aliens,
Lost World: Jurassic Parkscience fiction, mad scientists, dinosaurs, action
Jurassic Park IIIscience fiction, dinosaurs, action
Fifth Elementscience fiction, aliens, romance,
Dark Cityscience fiction, horror, mystery
Starship Troopersscience fiction, aliens, romance, war
Evitaperiod drama, musical,
Daylightdrama, survival, action
The Mummyaction, period drama, horror, adventure, romance
Lethal Weapon 3action, drama, crime, romance
Lethal Weapon 4action, drama, comedy, crime, romance
Heidibook to movie adaptation, period drama, drama
Death Becomes Herdark comedy, fantasy,
I Come In Peace (Dark Angel)alien, science fiction, horror, mystery, Christmas
Borrowed HeartsChristmas, romance
Stay Tuneddark comedy, comedy, fantasy,
2000sGenre(s)
The Corescience fiction, end-of-the-world, mad scientists, romance, action
Life Aquatic with Steve Zissoudark comedy,
Day After Tomorrowscience fiction, disaster, survival, drama
Men in Black IIscience fiction, aliens, comedy
The Mummy Returnsaction, period drama, horror, adventure, romance
The Scorpion Kingaction, period drama, war, romance
Charlie and the Chocolate Factorymusical, comedy, book to movie,
Kate & Leopoldtime travel, romantic comedy
Undercover ChristmasChristmas, romance, comedy, drama
Surviving Lovedisaster, blizzards, romance, drama
Poseidon Adventure (miniseriesdrama,
Day the Earth Stood STillaliens, science fiction
2010sGenre(s)
The Hostscience fiction, aliens, romance,
The Martianscience fiction, space, survival
Men in Black 3science fiction, aliens, time travel,
Batman Return of the Caped Crusaderanimated, super hero
Batman Vs. Two-faceanimated, super hero
Free Birdsanimated, time travel, animal fantasy
Hope at ChristmasChristmas, romance
Holiday Inn (Broadway)Christmas, musical
2020sGenre(s)
The Flashscience fiction, time travel, super heroes
Fantastic Four: First Stepsscience fiction, super heroes
Wonkamusical, comedy






© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews