Laura Ingalls Wilder: A Biography (Little House Nonfiction)
Laura Ingalls Wilder: A Biography (Little House Nonfiction) book cover

Laura Ingalls Wilder: A Biography (Little House Nonfiction)

Paperback – Illustrated, January 2, 2007

Price
$9.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
256
Publisher
HarperCollins
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0060885526
Dimensions
0.51 x 5.12 x 7.62 inches
Weight
5.8 ounces

Description

From her pioneer days on the prairie to her golden years with her husband, Almanzo, and their daughter, Rose, Laura Ingalls Wilder has become a friend to all who have read about her adventures. This behind-the-scenes account chronicles the real events in Laura's life that inspired her to write her stories and also describes her life after the last Little House book ends. William Anderson is a historian, educator, and author of twenty-five books of biography, travel, and history. His groundbreaking research on Laura Ingalls Wilder and her books led to many HarperCollins titles, including Laura Ingalls Wilder: A Biography, Laura Ingalls Wilder Country , and A Little House Sampler . He has also written for Travel & Leisure , the Saturday Evening Post , the Christian Science Monitor , and many other national magazines. Anderson is a frequent speaker at conferences, schools, and libraries. He makes his home in Michigan. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Laura Ingalls Wilder A Biography By William Anderson HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. Copyright © 2007 William AndersonAll right reserved. ISBN: 9780060885526 Chapter One A Pioneer Family When Laura Ingalls was born in the woods in the state of Wisconsin, the land there was still raw and wild. The region was called "The Big Woods" because the forests stretched out for miles toward the bluffs of the Mississippi River to the west and on to Lake Superior to the north. Panthers and bears and deer roamed through the brush, and the big trees grew thick enough to blot out the sky overhead. Only the coming of a few trappers, hunters and farmers made the countryside seem slightly civilized. Still, miles often separated one frontier farm from the next. Laura's parents, Charles and Caroline Ingalls, were Wisconsin pioneers. Her father, Charles Philip Ingalls, was born near Cuba, New York, in 1836. His boyhood was spent with a big family of eight brothers and sisters moving west with their parents, Lansford and Laura Ingalls. When Charles was nine, the family lived in the state of Illinois, just west of a growing frontier town called Chicago. Then they traveled north into Wisconsin, settling close to the Oconomowoc River, near the village of Concord. Working with his father and his brothers on their family farm, Charles grew strong and straight and keen in the ways of the woods. He learned to be a shrewd frontiersman, meeting new difficulties and hardships with spirit and skill. Making the new land produce enough food for the Ingalls family was a challenge that Charles, his brothers and their father conquered together. When work was slack on their own place, the Ingalls boys worked for other farmers. They brought home the money they earned, to help buy shoes and schoolbooks for the younger brothers and sisters. Peter and Charles were the oldest; then came Lydia, Polly, Lansford James, Laura Ladocia, Hiram, George and Ruby. For Charles Ingalls, attending the neighborhood schools was possible only when he could be spared from farm work. But he quickly realized the importance of reading and writing and all knowledge. He learned to write his name, Charles P. Ingalls, with a flourish, and he became a good speller. His family were all good storytellers, but Charles also liked to read. When he was seventeen, a hard-earned $1.25 left his pocket to buy a scroll-covered two-volume set of books called The Life of Napoleon. Growing up in the Wisconsin woods along the Oconomowoc River, Charles not only learned to be a skilled carpenter, trapper, woodsman, hunter and farmer. He also learned to sing and dance and play songs and hymns on a honey-colored fiddle. No one in the family remembered how Charles Ingalls first acquired a violin; perhaps he bought it from a traveling peddler or traded for it with a neighbor. By the time he was a teenager, Charles and his fiddle had started a lifetime of making music together. The Ingalls family sat around the fireplace through long winter evenings listening to the music Charles fiddled, and soon the neighbors knew where they could find rollicking, foot-tapping tunes. Charles Ingalls was so jolly and so bold a fiddler he was a popular addition to the neighborhood frolics. The Ingalls children attended spelling schools, hot-maple-sugar parties, sleigh rides and corn-husking socials. But the dances were the most exciting events of all. At harvest parties or wedding dances or house buildings, Charles Ingalls was an important guest. With other fiddlers and banjo players, or alone on his own violin, he'd play "The Irish Washerwoman," "Buffalo Gals," "The Money Musk" or "Sweet Betsy from Pike" for the dancers. At one of the parties, the snow fell so thickly in the Wisconsin woods that the guests could not leave for home. They didn't mind; they simply kept the fires burning and the candles lit and danced all night to the sound of Charles' fiddle. On the other side of the Oconomowoc River from the Ingalls farm lived a family of Quiners and Holbrooks. The Ingalls and the Quiner children all became friends while they were growing up. Like the Ingallses, the Quiners came from the east. They had been among the first pioneer families to settle in the vicinity of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The parents, Henry and Charlotte Quiner, had married in New Haven, Connecticut, in 183 1, but they had lived in Ohio and Indiana before they settled in the Wisconsin woods. When their daughter Caroline was born on December 12, 1839, some said she was the first non-Indian baby born in the Milwaukee area. In addition to Caroline, there were two Quiner boys, Joseph and Henry, and a sister named Martha. Later, Eliza and Thomas were born. Father Quiner did a lively business as a trader with the many Indians who still lived in the Wisconsin woods. The Indians often ventured into the settlement, to see what traders like Henry Quiner would give them for their animal skins and furs. During the autumn of 1844, Father Quiner left home on a trading trip by sailing schooner on Lake Michigan. As the ship neared the Mackinac Straits, a violent lake storm blew up. Ship, crew and passengers were lost in the cold waters, including Father Quiner. Caroline was five that fall, but she always remembered the wagonload of relatives who came to tell her mother and brothers and sisters that their father was not coming home. Without a father, life for the Quiners became bleak and sparse. Some friendly Indians helped feed the family through the first lonely winter; they remembered their fair trades with Henry Quiner. But food and fuel were often nearly gone. Once, flour for bread making ran out, and there was no money to buy more. The Quiners never forgot the generous man headed for Milwaukee who left a whole barrel of the flour for the hungry family of seven. Continues... Excerpted from Laura Ingalls Wilder by William Anderson Copyright © 2007 by William Anderson. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Dive into the world of the author of the beloved Little House series!
  • From her pioneer days on the prairie to her golden years with her husband, Almanzo, and their daughter, Rose, Laura Ingalls Wilder has become a friend to all who have read about her adventures. This expertly researched, behind-the-scenes account of Laura’s life chronicles the real events that inspired her to write her stories, and also describes her life after the last Little House book ends.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(490)
★★★★
25%
(204)
★★★
15%
(123)
★★
7%
(57)
-7%
(-57)

Most Helpful Reviews

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I loved this book!

A++. This was a very informative book. It is young adult format and vocabulary, but just as interesting for adults like me!
It gives you the background to the whole story from the real Laura Ingalls, from her memory. anyone who has seen the program or read any of the books needs to check this out.i am a retired middle school librarian and this book is perfect for that age group.
It is a true peek into the real pioneer days, how families lived, ate, games they played. Also a touch of the really dangerously brutal part, like a woman giving birth alone in a cabin in the vast wilderness....no details to upset younger ones.
I strongly recommend this book. Read it with your daughter, your grand daughter, or just for yourself.
37 people found this helpful
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Loved It

Very interesting, historical read. I was delighted to get to know more about the lady behind the TV show "Little House on the Prairie" and her growing up/adult years. This woman actually lived from Wagon Trains to Airplanes, what a fascinating life and time to live in.
13 people found this helpful
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This is written for older children who are Little House fans.

I liked this book very much and made sure I read it before turning it over to our school's library. I hope other girls will pick it up and begin to understand the time period LIW lived in, survived and thrived, in spite of great adversity.
12 people found this helpful
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This was a really nice Biography of Laura and her families

This was a really nice Biography of Laura and her families...and later in the book it almost is a biography of Rose. But with Laura and Rose being so close it would almost be hard to keep the two lives separate in telling of Laura's you had to mix some of Rose's in. It has some photos of the Ingallas and the Wilders and where they lived etc.

It was told with some actual quotes from Laura or Rose which made it nice. It was kind of story form but yet told almost as if the author was sitting beside you visiting with you.

This version didn't let on that the Wilder's had a very tough life, where as another book I read let me to believe their lives were very hard and Almonzo was ALWAYS sick. But he lived to be 90 and worked his farm almost up until his death. (As did Laura) It also told of her writing her stories and her interaction (when she was able) with children or adults in book signings etc. which again is different than I had read before as before they implied Laura hated to be out in public and didn't like children very much at all... but according to this biography she loved children and hated to not write them all back from the mail she received. Or she loved having visitors stop and she would entertain them with milk and cookies and often telling them her stories. I learnt quite a bit from this book
11 people found this helpful
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Satisfying review of the Little House story and LIW's life

Very interesting and a quick read. So nice to get the adult perspective on her life story. I also bought the annotated autobiography, but it is a massive hardcover. This book would be great for taking on a plane as it's light and only takes a few hours to read.
10 people found this helpful
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Product in good condition

This was not a random purchase. I knew more or less what I was ordering. There are two or three biographies of Laura Ingalls Wilder and each one seems to serve a different purpose. This one is short and concise which is handy in case you get your facts mixed up. Firstly you have to read her 8 books for children and the sequel of a later period, about her own life. They are very powerful and not only for children as the descriptions of how things were made and done in a pioneer household are harder to understand if you as a child have never seen that done. The stories are powerful because they are true descriptions of her memories of her experiences. Any shortened version, sticking to the main or important facts, is missing the point and skips over the impact of each experience.
9 people found this helpful
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More information than The Little House Books

This was a fantastic read. It brought more details and truths than the Little House Books. If you like Laura and her stories, you will love this book.
8 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

What an excellent book. I am reading it right now with so much pleasure....I love Little House and especially the true stores of the pioneer days, such as Laura's....I look forward to receiving the Ingalls Christmas video for Christmas this year and plan on purchasing Melissa Gilberts book on playing Laura.......
7 people found this helpful
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Not a fan at all. Very boring.

While I give props to the writer for spending his time, I feel this book was merely a way to tell the basics and "fast forward" through the Ingalls life. Way too bland. I am not entertained, nor do I feel I can't put it down. I'm 70 pages in which is about 1/3 of the book, and I cannot seem to find any interest. One of the more boring books I've ever read, and I wanted to like this one, as my first ever "Little House" book.

The author writes in a way that has a lack of emotion. You don't identify with any of the characters or want to follow them from town to town. You're just told where they go, and you're told about grasshoppers destroying their home, forcing them to relocate, for instance. He gives very little other than a generic and boring outline of their life. One minute Pa is showing Laura and Mary Indian beads. Then it gets dusk and they return home to find Ma with a baby. Yet, there was nothing saying she was even pregnant prior to that. That's just how it's written. Another part speaks of Pa finding a house for rent and them moving in. Next paragraph immediately says Laura came home from school and Ma was in bed with a new baby brother. Next paragraph talks about them all wanting to go back east. There was more detail about the grasshoppers than the building of the house. Actually it said they lived in the soddy for a couple seasons, no major details about building "the little house" like in the tv series, other than describing it was yellow pine, I believe.

I should've thought first that this is only a 230 page book (and how much can you really fit that much about Laura's entire life?) However, either way, I was quite disappointed about the dryness of the content. I would not recommend it unless you just want to kill time and add it as a "notch" in your Little House bedpost.

If you are a book lover, and love to sink into the blanket and have a book tantalize your mind with sights, sounds, emotion, tastes, and make you feel like you're there, I would not recommend this at all.
4 people found this helpful
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A must-read for true LIW fans

I found this book nearly as wonderful as one of Laura's originals. It's written in a storytelling, prosaic style, much like Laura's stories, and features some "dialogue" and other tidbits to make it more of a story than a dry work of non-fiction, or history books, as many biographies tend to be. I read the book in one long sitting on one day, although it is well over 200 pages, so it is an easy and engaging read.

Anderson does such a wonderful job telling the story and researching the details that Laura fans longed to know, beginning with Caroline & Charles births all the way to Laura's death. I finally feel satisfied (and could only be moreso by viewing actual video footage of Laura, which sadly, doesn't exist). All that you wanted to know in detail about life after "The First Four Years" is told in the second half of this book, all up to the end of Laura's life. I really appreciated the details Anderson used of recounting significant and even minor moments, travels, employments, farm or housing developments, hobbies, writing the books and the resulting accolades, and family happenings of Laura, Almanzo, Pa, Ma, Mary, Cary, Grace, and Rose.

I am not exagerating to say that this book made me cry so much! For the last thirty pages or so, especially on the ocassion of Pa's death, who, besides Laura, had been special to me in reading the books, I was just bawling. Anderson treats his subjects with the kind of love only the truest of Laura's fans could hope for. It's a real treat for those who always "wanted more" after reading the Little House series. Rest in Peace Laura and Pa! Thank you to William Anderson for a very fine book.
4 people found this helpful