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Little House In The Big Woods CD

Little House In The Big Woods CD

List Price: $25.95
Your Price: $17.13
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: the best little log house
Review: I read this entire series (more than once or twice!) as a young girl and saved every book so that I could pass them on to my children. (Alas, I have all boys!) This would be a wonderful gift for any young girl. I would even read them again as an adult.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Yearning for the days of a long time ago
Review: "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."
Well, while these books took place a long time ago, thanks to Laura, this period in time, that cozy house in the Big woods of Wisconsin, the Ingalls Family, the firelight dancing on the walls in time to the sound of Pa's fiddle will never be forgoten in this timeless classic for all ages, boys and girls alike.
I read these a long time ago and absolutly loved them. Now that I'm grown, I'm rereading them with my family, and they still take me away to the days Laura grew up in oh so fast. These are a wonderful set of books to read by yourself, or to your family.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Little House on the Prarie
Review:
What I've always enjoyed about the Laura Ingalls Wilder books is her loving attention to detail and her beautiful depictions of family life - not just the daily chores and jobs of a pioneer family, but the warmth and closeness that every family should have. For instance, when reading this book you are instantly transported to the small cabin, where the fire is going strong and Ma is knitting and Pa is tickling his daughters with his beard and telling them terrifying stories of panthers. When there's rain, you are up in the attic with Mary and Laura as they play among the hanging vegetables and listen to the drops drumming on the roof. Then the holidays arrive with their rare sweets and some respite from daily work. Truly, a beautiful book, and though it's not my favorite from the series, it's still a gem worth reading.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Glimpses of the Past
Review: Life is hard living on the frontier of Wisconsin in the 1870's. Laura is only a little girl, but she still needs to help with chorus around her family's log cabin. There are wild animals in the woods, and they must provide for themselves since the nearest town in hours away. But it's not all hard work. If Pa's not tired, he might entertain his daughters with a story or by playing his fiddle. With family relatively nearby to visit, life is certainly never dull.

I had not read these books since I was a child until picking this up to reread. I had forgotten how entertaining they really are. There is no real plot, just a collection of stories covering a year in the life of the Ingalls family. This makes sense since they really are an autobiographical work. Still, the simple charm of the stories sucked me right in and I had a hard time putting the book down. There is plenty of detail here to give anyone a good picture of daily life during this time. And I must mention the illustrations by Garth Williams that greatly add to the book.

There's a reason these books are so well loved 70 years after they were written. They are an entertaining look at everyday life in a different time and place. This is a book to treasure.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Childrens Classic
Review: The first book of the Little House series that has become an (North) American classic. When I first read this book as a child I was thoroughly mesmerized by Wilder's evocative portrayal of pioneer life in the "big woods" of western Wisconsin. The book's pertinant underlying theme is the importance of the family unit, and the perserverance of the human spirit through times of hardship. It should not be forgotten, however, that the book is an idealization, a toned-down version, of pioneer life. Wilder was later accused of distorting and fabricating her stories, an aligation which shocked her because it had been her intention to write stories, not history. But that, I guess, is irrelevant to the children that this book--and those of the series--was intended for.


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