Sunday, December 21, 2008

Guest Blogger Review: Little House on the Prairie

by Arwynn McKinty (aged 6)

Two girls named Laura and Mary, their baby sister Carrie, their papa and their mama went from the Big Woods to Indian Country in the olden days. They travelled all the way from Wisconsin to Oklahoma in their wagon and their horses Pet and Patty and their dog Jack. Jack walks under the wagon and the horses pull it. When they got to the prairie pa built a house out of logs and trees. To get their food pa went hunting. At Christmas one of their neighbours brought them their presents because Santa Claus couldn't go across the river. Pa dug a well and their other neighbour Mr Scott fell down it! When they had their house finished and really beautiful with glass in the windows the government told them to move on so they went in their wagon to go somewhere else and build a new house! I really liked the book, but I felt sad when they had to move.

28 comments:

Gerard Brennan said...

Arwynn - Excellent review! And thanks for adding a little class to your daddy's blog.

gb

Arwynn said...

Thank you very much.

Susan said...

Arwynn, this is terrific writing. I loved reading it.

Granny B

Arwynn said...

Thank You!

Michael Stone said...

Arwynn, my little girl Heather is seven and I think she'd enjoy this book very much. I will have to tell her you recommended it when she gets up in the morning. (It's in the middle of the night here in England. We're way behind you!)

Brian O'Rourke said...

Arwynn-
Great review! My wife and I enjoyed reading your post.
-B

Arwynn said...

Mike, Adrian here. Its a pretty good book actually. Arywnn over to you:

Michael, if Heather likes a book about girls having adventures in the wild west they will like the book.

Arwynn said...

Thank you Brian and Mrs Brian. My favourite bit is when they built the chimney out of stones from the river and when Santa Claus came.

seanag said...

Arwynn, my niece Olivia is seven like Mike's daughter Heather, and I think I should pass your review on to her, since I don't know if she knows the Little House books yet. At this point, she's more into fairies.

My word vericator word is, 'famed'. I kid you not. It might be like a fortune cookie about your future as a reviewer!

adrian mckinty said...

Seanag

Arwynn's away to bed, but I can thoroughly recommend it. Pa is a man's man, building a house from nothing - nothing, hunting, digging a well, providing for the family. He's a smart, resourceful, tactful, diplomatic guy and Mrs Wilder aint no slouch either. This book has the reputation of being a novel for girls. It isnt at all. Its like Robinson Crusoe only more believeable. I read along with Arwynn and loved it.

I wish I could tell people - wipe the TV series from your mind and read the book.

adrian mckinty said...

Seanag

Actually it would be Mrs Ingalls wouldnt it?

Apparently there is some controversy as to who actually wrote LHOTP. I like a juicy scandal. Wikipedia has the details.

Susan said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Susan said...

Laura Ingalls Wilder visited David's elementary school class in the early 1940s north of Chicago and told many stories to the kids - some in the books. Reminder that her parents were probably really in the 'west' which Illinois was even in the late 19th century.

Susan

marco said...

So the daughter edited Mrs.Ingalls work?
mmm...I wonder if that's the case also in the McKinty family

Pa dug a well and their other neighbour Mr Scott fell down it!

Did he do it on purpose? ;)

When they had their house finished and really beautiful with glass in the windows the government told them to move on

Governments do this from time to time,yes.

Wonderful review Arwynn.I wish I had your talent-When I had to do book summaries I went on rambling for pages and pages...

Ciao,
Marco

adrian mckinty said...

Susan

Good to know.

A...

adrian mckinty said...

Marco

I dont know if we'll ever know who wrote what. If indeed it was Mrs Ingalls its certainly a case for late blooming as she didnt write a word until her sixties.

seanag said...

"Pa dug a well and their other neighbour Mr Scott fell down it!"

Did he do it on purpose? ;)


You know, I think Arwynn's only real mistake here is have posted her review on her dad's crime related blog, where people are just a tad too suspicious. If it had been Michael Forsythe who had dug that well for instance, there would be no question about intent.

It's fascinating that this so vanished era still had a living representative to tell the stories even so late as the forties.

The controversy is interesting, but maybe a little beside the point. I've heard Thomas Wolfe, among others enjoyed (or endured) a bit of editorial license too. Is it substantially different because it was 'only a daughter' who took the liberty? Families are complicated things, as is editing.

I am glad you liked the books, Adrian, apparently at least as much as Arwynn did. It's an example of what I was trying to say over on my blog about your book, which is that sometimes a book is promoted only to one audience when in fact it may have several--because the writing holds up, for one thing.

So are you guys going to read the rest of them?

I do hope reading this one book doesn't make you think you can actually run a Tasmanian dairy farm...though Arwynn might.

I

Peter Rozovsky said...

Welcome to the blogosphere, Arwynn. I wish I were Jack. I think it would be fun to walk under the wagon.
==============
Detectives Beyond Borders
“Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home”
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

adrian mckinty said...

Seanag

I actually think Mr Scott didnt fall down the well. He went down to help pa dig and he had a sort of fainting fit down there because of the heat and humidity. A rare example of weakness in a book of VERY tough people.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

There's a pretty disturbing scene where Jack falls overboard as the wagon's crossing the river but SPOILER ALERT it all works out ok.

Katherine Howell said...

Oh, Little House On The Prairie .... the whole series was the first love of my life. Look out Arwynn, you start with them and a whole pile of years later your own novels are getting published just like Laura's (or whoever it was wrote them).

Ask your dad if he'd be interested in a book swop, both of mine for an arc of Fifty Grand??

cheers,
Katherine.

www.katherinehowell.com

adrian mckinty said...

Katherine

Give me your email and I'll fire one off in January. Deal?

Yeah I enjoyd LH too.

Katherine Howell said...

Thanks Ado!!

katherine@katherinehowell.com

bewdy mate

(out of australianisms now ...)

Have a good festivus,
cheers,
k.

adrian mckinty said...

Katherine

Festivus is well under way, in fact I've been doing the "airing of grievances" all morning.

Send you a book in a week or two. (Unless Oz customs grabs em)

seanag said...

Wow, if 'airing of grievances' is key to the celebration , me and my friends at the bookstore seem to have gotten an early start on it. Or maybe it's just the dress rehearsal.

I don't know who in my personal scenario is the 'head of the table that needs to be wrestled to the ground', but let me tell you--I'm just in the mood.

Peter Rozovsky said...

If airing of grievances is a sign of celebration, I am postively drunk with merriment.

V-word: fraids
==============
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

Leisa Nee said...

Arwynn- it's Miss Leisa from Colorado. I really enjoyed reading your review, I absolutely LOVED reading it. Hope you are doing well. :o)

adrian mckinty said...

thank you miss leisa i am very well and enjoying australia!!!