The Long Winter. Laura Ingalls Wilder. Illustrated by Garth Williams. 1940. 335 pages. [Source: Library]
Out of all the Little House books, I probably reread the Long Winter most. There is just something about it that I love. The book opens with the Ingalls family preparing reasonably for the coming winter. Their plans don't take into account an early winter, a long winter, and a hard winter. Once there was a touch of winter in October, it was there to stay. The "good" weather being merely not-currently-in-a-four-day-blizzard. Some days the Ingalls and their neighbors are blessed with two days in between blizzards.
So, to begin back at the beginning, the Ingalls family moves to town after the first blizzard in October. It becoming obvious to Ma and Pa that they likely would not survive if they stayed at their claim. They take what provisions they've got, and everyone moves to town. But the provisions that they've got, that they've carefully planned and prepared won't be enough under these conditions. No one foresaw that there would be no trains coming to town during the winter months bringing food and fuel and such. Every person in town feels the stress of it. How will they survive? Will they survive?
This is the book where Laura and Almanzo first meet.
I love the intensity of this one. It's a book you experience. The cold. The hunger. The angst.
© 2015 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
1 comment:
Somehow I think I missed this one... I discovered Little House in the Big Woods in the fourth grade classroom book case... I think it was an old clothbound version, an early edition for sure! I was hooked!!!
Thanks for the wonderful review! I need to track it down!!!
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