107. The Long Winter (Little House #6) Laura Ingalls Wilder. 1940. 334 pages. [Source: Library]
First sentence: The mowing machine's whirring sounded cheerfully from the old buffalo wallow south of the claim shanty, where bluestem grass stood thick and tall and Pa was cutting it for hay.
Premise/plot: The Ingalls family--and the whole community/territory--face a brutal, harsh, and terribly long winter full of blizzards.
This first chapter is called "Make Hay While the Sun Shines" and if it's
found within a book called THE LONG WINTER, the reader knows what to
expect even if the characters don't. The book opens with Ma and Pa and
family getting ready for harvest and winter. Laura is helping out Pa.
Mary and Carrie are helping out Ma. Laura is especially pleased that
she's old enough (around 14 now) to help Pa and do outdoor chores.
The
Ingalls family is living in their claim shanty. This would be the first
fall/winter they've been there. And they know it will be tough, but
when the first blizzard comes in October,
they know that it wouldn't only be tough to survive but impossible to
survive if they were to try to stay on their homestead. Fortunately, Pa
owns property in town. A place where they can be nice and warm and cozy
for the winter. Or so they think.
What no one could know is just
how hard, how long, how tough this winter was going to be. Some folks
are prepared--the Wilder boys for instance--but most are not. Most are
relying on the train making regular stops in town. The trains are
essential for stocking the stores of supplies. But when almost every day
brings a blizzard--with clear days coming only one at a time and never
on a predictable schedule--it soon becomes clear that the trains will
not be saving the day. Not til spring. The town's survival, the Ingalls'
family survival, is a big if at this point.
Cold. Hunger. Starvation. No supplies. What's not to love?
My thoughts: The Long Winter has always been one of my favorites of the Little House series. I'll admit it tends to make you cold and hungry. But that's not a bad thing, right? I didn't think so. Only two books can trick my mind and body--okay maybe three--into thinking it's cold and hungry. One, of course, is The Long Winter. The other two are by Susan Beth Pfeffer. I think one of the reasons I love The Long Winter is that it introduces Almanzo Wilder onto the scene. True, there was Farmer Boy, but not every reader takes the time to read Farmer Boy. I spent forty plus years avoiding it. I read it earlier this year for the first time. But this Almanzo is a man--a young man it's true--19 years of age. And he's acting "manly" alright when it's time to save the day. I love every scene Almanzo is in. Laura first meets him when she's lost and trying to find her Pa in the slough of hay. Here is the description: "His blue eyes twinkled down at her as if he had known her a long time." Anyway, I love this book.
Is it my favorite and best from the series? Probably. I do love These Happy Golden Years. So those two are my favorite and best. But I really LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this one so much.© 2024 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
1 comment:
Especially if it's the real thing. Everyone should avoid inadvertently buying the p.c. revised versions!
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