Little Town on the Prairie: (Little House Series: Classic Stories) by Laura Ingalls Wilder, Paul Woodiel (Performed by), Cherry Jones (Read by)

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(Audio - Unabridged, 4 cassettes, 6 hours 30min.)

  • Publisher: Harpercollins Childrens
  • Pub. Date: July 2005
  • ISBN-13: 9780060565046
  • Age Range: 8 to 12
  • Series: Little House Series, #7
  • Edition Description: Unabridged, 4 cassettes, 6 hours 30min.
 
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Synopsis

The little settlement that weathered the long, hard winter of 1880-81 is now a growing town. Laura is growing up, and she goes to her first evening social. Mary is at last able to go to a college for the blind. Best of all, Almanzo Wilder asks permission to walk home from church with Laura. And Laura, now fifteen years old, receives her certificate to teach school.

Annotation

Originally published in 1941, Little Town on the Prairie is the seventh book in the Little House Series.

Mary Loftus - Children's Literature

This full-color collector's edition is a nice package for a classic story that has stood the test of time. Young readers will still enjoy the quaint memories of Laura Ingalls' life on the prairie, which was first published in 1941. Each chapter is a short story in itself. Together they tell of Laura's life as a fifteen-year-old. Mary moves away to college, Almanzo begins courting Laura (although she doesn't actually realize it), and the novel culminates with Laura testing for teacher certification earlier than expected. She's needed at a school 12 miles away, and readers will close the cover of this book curious to read the next one to find out how Laura fares in the classroom. Although some time has passed since this story actually occurred, readers will relate to naughty students in the one room schoolhouse, Laura's concerns about her studies, and a rivalry with the jealous Nellie Olson. Reading this book is also a great education on life in pioneer times: the endless chores, hard work, and threatening weather that will cause any reader to appreciate the comforts of the 21st century. 2004 (orig. 1941), HarperTrophy, Ages 8 to 12.

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Biography

Millions of readers have read -- and re-read -- the Little House on the Prairie books, Laura Ingalls Wilder’s charming, fascinating tales of her own girlhood spent in the American West. The series, which is both a document of frontier-town America in the 19th century and a beautifully told coming-of-age story, is beloved by readers everywhere for their universal truths about family, love, and endurance in the face of hardship.

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Customer Reviews

My Reviewby Anonymous

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November 30, 2006: I can remember reading the entire Little House series one winter while in grade-school. I?d read the stories of Laura Ingalls Wilder and her family from a rocking chair in front of the fireplace in my home. In Little Town on the Prairie, the small town of De Smet, where Laura?s family made their home many years ago, is beginning to grow. De Smet isn?t the only thing that?s growing - the Ingalls girls are as well. Mary, now faced with the challenge of being blind, dreams of attending a school for the blind. However, the family is faced with finding the money to make this dream a reality. When Pa tells Laura that he?s found a job for her in town, her mind begins to race with thought of being able to, ?earn fifteen dollars, maybe even twenty, to help send Mary to college.? Other than helping her sister go to school, Laura?s dreams are still occupied by the handsome, Almanzo. Though some things are changing for the girls, others remain the same, like the ever-present havoc created by their longtime nemesis, Nellie Olson. Join the Ingalls family and share in the joys and pains that come along with becoming an adult in a Little Town on the Prairie.

a wounderfull lifeby Anonymous

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August 03, 2005: This book is wounderfull in every way.Larua works hard to try and get her sister in college.She gradully gets use to life in town.There are points were she whised that her sister Mary didn't go to college.She also meets someone who she realy doesn't whant to see any more.


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