Little House in the Big Woods
| I. |
About the Author |
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| II. |
Overview |
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| III. |
Setting |
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| IV. |
Themes and Characters |
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| V. |
Literary Qualities |
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| VI. |
Social Sensitivity |
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| VII. |
Topics for Discussion |
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| VIII. |
Ideas for Reports and Papers |
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| IX. |
Related Titles and Adaptations |
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Literature Guide - Little House in the Big Woods
Wilder, Laura Ingalls Published 1932
I About the Author
Born on February 7, 1867, in a log cabin at the edge of the woods near Pepin, Wisconsin, Laura Ingalls Wilder spent her childhood as part of the great pioneering-homesteading movement in the Midwest and Great Plains. Her father's restlessness, along with hard times and some hard luck, caused the family to move several times. The first move was to the southern Kansas prairiethen known as Indian Territorywhere unfortunately the Ingallses settled on land reserved for the Osage Native Americans. They decided to try Walnut Grove, Minnesota, but after a few years of farming, they suffered a grasshopper plague that wiped out the crops. In Burr Oak, Iowa, where the Ingallses were innkeepers, illness took the life of Laura's baby brother and left her sister Mary blind. The family finally settled in De Smet, South Dakota, a few scattered homesteads that they helped transform into a small town. By now, the Ingalls sisters numbered four: Mary, Laura, Carrie, and Grace. In De Smet, Laura endured a long, hungry winter with her family, taught school for three terms, and met Almanzo Wilder, whom she married in 1885. ...
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