The Little House Collection (Little House, #1-9) by Laura Ingalls Wilder


The Little House Collection (Little House, #1-9)
Title : The Little House Collection (Little House, #1-9)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0060529962
ISBN-10 : 9780060529963
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 2700
Publication : First published January 1, 1971

This nine-book paperback box set of the classic series features the classic black-and-white artwork from Garth Williams.

The nine books in the timeless Little House series tell the story of Laura’s real childhood as an American pioneer, and are cherished by readers of all generations. They offer a unique glimpse into life on the American frontier, and tell the heartwarming, unforgettable story of a loving family.

Little House in the Big Woods

Meet the Ingalls family—Laura, Ma, Pa, Mary, and baby Carrie, who all live in a cozy log cabin in the big woods of Wisconsin in the 1870s. Though many of their neighbors are wolves and panthers and bears, the woods feel like home, thanks to Ma’s homemade cheese and butter and the joyful sounds of Pa’s fiddle.

Farmer Boy

As Laura Ingalls is growing up in a little house in Kansas, Almanzo Wilder lives on a big farm in New York. He and his brothers and sisters work hard from dawn to supper to help keep their family farm running. Almanzo wishes for just one thing—his very own horse—but he must prove that he is ready for such a big responsibility.

Little House on the Prairie

When Pa decides to sell the log house in the woods, the family packs up and moves from Wisconsin to Kansas, where Pa builds them their little house on the prairie! Living on the farm is different from living in the woods, but Laura and her family are kept busy and are happy with the promise of their new life on the prairie.

On the Banks of Plum Creek

The Ingalls family lives in a sod house beside Plum Creek in Minnesota until Pa builds them a new house made of sawed lumber. The money for the lumber will come from their first wheat crop. But then, just before the wheat is ready to harvest, a strange glittering cloud fills the sky, blocking out the sun. Millions of grasshoppers cover the field and everything on the farm, and by the end of a week, there is no wheat crop left.

By the Shores of Silver Lake

Pa Ingalls heads west to the unsettled wilderness of the Dakota Territory. When Ma, Mary, Laura, Carrie, and baby Grace join him, they become the first settlers in the town of De Smet. Pa starts work on the first building of the brand new town, located on the shores of Silver Lake.

The Long Winter

The first terrible storm comes to the barren prairie in October. Then it snows almost without stopping until April. With snow piled as high as the rooftops, it’s impossible for trains to deliver supplies, and the townspeople, including Laura and her family, are starving. Young Almanzo Wilder, who has settled in the town, risks his life to save the town.

Little Town on the Prairie

De Smet is rejuvenated with the beginning of spring. But in addition to the parties, socials, and “literaries,” work must continue. Laura spends many hours sewing shirts to help Ma and Pa get enough money to send Mary to a college for the blind. But in the evenings, Laura makes time for a new caller, Almanzo Wilder.

These Happy Golden Years

Laura must continue to earn money to keep Mary in her college for the blind, so she gets a job as a teacher. It’s not easy, and for the first time she’s living away from home. But it gets a little better every Friday, when Almanzo picks Laura up to take her back home for the weekend. Though Laura is still young, she and Almanzo are officially courting, and she knows that this is a time for new beginnings.

The First Four Years

Laura Ingalls and Almanzo Wilder have just been married! They move to a small prairie homestead to start their lives together. But each year brings new challenges—storms, sickness, fire, and unpaid debts. These first four years call for courage, strength, and a great deal of determination. And through it all, Laura and Almanzo still have their love, which only grows when baby Rose arrives.


The Little House Collection (Little House, #1-9) Reviews


  • Vanessa

    Like so many people, I read and loved these books as a girl. When my son was an infant and I was looking for something to entertain me during his marathon bouts of nursing, I decided to read the series again. I still found it immensely enjoyable, but with one striking difference: When I was a child, Pa Ingalls seemed like the coolest dad on the planet - he played the fiddle, made his own bullets and took his family on all sorts of adventures all over the unsettled west. As an adult, however, I thought Pa came off like a flakey dreamer who put his family through years of hell, always claiming "Caroline! If you just put up with backbreaking labor, mortal danger and starving kids for a few years, just watch! This expanse of desert/marsh/frozen tundra will become the breadbasket of the world and make us rich as kings!" How Ma Ingalls put up with his crazy schemes for so long is a testament t her patience/holy doormat-ness. On re-reading, I thought the series must be missing the volumes "Little House on the San Andreas Fault", "On the Slopes of Angry Volcano" and "By the Toxic Tidepools of Three-Mile Island."

  • Belinda

    OK, so I'm a little generous with the whole Little House series. Sue me. But for me, as a child, they WERE "amazing," and here's why.

    When I was in first grade in a tiny, tiny town in Arkansas, and hating school with the heat of a thousand suns, each member of the class was given identical packages at Christmas time. They were books. I'd been reading for a long time already, so loved a new book...but disappointment set in as my classmates who got their books first opened them before I had a chance to open mine, and they were all the same: A beginner children's book called "The Big Snow." (I think) It was about a kid getting dressed to go out into the snow. On one page, he put on his pants. On the next page, his boots, and so on and so on, FOR AN ENTIRE BOOK. I wanted to cry.

    And then when I opened MY book, it was
    Little House in the Big Woods. Then I DID cry, because it was a REAL book, and somebody "got" me, and knew I was different, and it was OK.


    I loved the series as a kid, and after reading each book, would spend lots of time imagining that I had brought Laura from her time to mine, and what it would be like to show her things like cars and telephones and televisions--she'd be AMAZED! And she'd think I was so COOL!

    Yup. I just reviewed a book as a 7-year-old. You're welcome.

  • Kathy

    I read these as a young girl and loved them. That's about all I remembered about them, though. So I decided to read them again, and I'm so glad I did!

    Reasons I loved these books:

    1. They are clean and wholesome.
    2. They teach responsibility and hard work.
    3. They teach about gratitude and being happy with what you have instead of looking elsewhere for happiness.
    4. FAMILY is emphasized and taught to be an important part of society. Laura's family is warm, loving, and kind.
    5. After reading about all of the work that went into obtaining honey, cheese, eggs, grain, meat, oats, and butter, I'm grateful that I can make a quick trip to the grocery store and spend my time doing other things!

    I enjoyed every character in this series. I especially loved Laura and grew to admire her throughout the series. She always wanted to be outside, enjoying nature. She wasn't big on sitting around for any extended amount of time. She was strong-willed and opinionated, yet well-mannered and feminine when needed. She was a true pioneer and worked hard for everything that she achieved in her life.

    I also enjoyed the fact that there was a strong father figure in these books, who loved his girls and taught them to work for their dreams. I was annoyed with the fact that he continued to uproot his family, but if he had quit the first time around, and everyone else had, too, then we wouldn't have the good country that we do today.

    This book isn't politically correct in some places, and it gave me a taste of what it was like to live back then. I'm grateful to be living today, but there are so many things to be learned from these great people!

    I better stop now before this gets too long. I'm going to buy all of these books because I will be reading them again, and again, and again...


  • Jess the Shelf-Declared Bibliophile

    Individual reviews were left on each book's page.

  • Eliza

    I read this series when I was in fourth grade...so it was many many years ago. However, the story has not left my mind. I absolutely adored these books, and I'm sure I would love them just as much if I re-read them! I remembered feeling as though I was with Laura's family during every journey they went through. It's a fascinating story - and a true one at that. I'd recommend that everyone reads this series at least once in their life!

  • Manybooks

    REVIEW OF THE KINDLE EDITION

    So one of my main children’s literature reading projects this year will be to (hopefully) and finally reread and post detailed reviews for Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House on the Prairie series (as thus far, I have only managed to do this for the third novel, for Little House on the Prairie). But while my reviews for the individual series novels will of course be posted separately, I am in fact going to be reading each of the Little House novels from this here simply wonderful and totally reader-friendly Kindle edition, from The Complete Little House on the Prairie Collection.

    Because it is in my humble much much easier and much less stressful reading nine novels in a single e-book omnibus (and yes, part of the reason why I have to date only managed to reread and review Little House on the Prairie and not any of the other series novels is precisely because it was always too much of a pain to keep lugging my hardcover editions of the Little House on the Prairie series around with me, something that is of course totally avoided with The Complete Little House on the Prairie Collection as everything is ready, waiting and easily portable as a Kindle edition, as an e-book).

    Four stars for the general and very much reader-friendly set-up I have encountered in The Complete Little House on the Prairie Collection and with my only caveat being that while ALL of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s texts have been faithfully and completely presented, unfortunately none of Garth William’s accompanying illustrations are included (something that does not really bother me all that much, since I have always found Williams’ pictures for the Little House on the Prairie series more like visual trims than an essential part of my reading experience, but since I do realise that for many readers, Garth Williams’ illustrations are an essential part of their childhood reading experience with regard to Laura Ingalls Wilder’s memoirs, I do feel that I must issue a warning that this here e-book omnibus, that The Complete Little House on the Prairie Collection only features Laura Ingalls Wilder’s printed words and does not include Garth Williams’ artwork).

  • Taylor

    Okay, I'll admit it. I still re-read these. I just finished a ramble though the pioneer prairies with Laura and enjoyed it throughly.

    I know there is an outcry about the treatment and representation of Native Americans in these books, not to mention women, African Americans, and children. But let's calm our politically correct minds for a moment and think about the treasure of literature these books are. Specifically, they are WONDERFUL for educating young people about how people of color, minorities, women, and children were treated and thought of in the late 1800s.

    It's not like Laura is out there advocating Native American oppression! These books are her memories (or maybe her daughter's interpretations of the stories she heard) and that's how it was for her and her pioneer family. It's not how it is today, thank goodness. Laura gifted us with these memories - let us use them wisely.

  • Debbie W.

    Overall, a wonderful classic collection: however, there are some politically-incorrect portions in some of these books.

  • Jacqueline Wheeler

    Read this series many times when I was younger and it's one of my favorites!

  • M.M. Strawberry Library & Reviews

    This is a nice classic, and I read the very first book in this series years ago for school. I will admit that any book I was forced to read for school was not one I enjoyed as much as I could/should have, because of the quizzes, projects, and the like which for most people, would lessen their enjoyment of said book. (I'm sure we all remember that kind of experience!) Even as a major bookworm, required classroom reading always dampened my enthusiasm.

    However, I did read the rest of the series on my own through the next few years, and I very much enjoyed the series. As a kid, I did not realize that this was only semi-autobiographical, and I learned years later that some of the real-life events that happened to the Ingalls family had been sanitized, or wiped out - no mention of Laura's dead baby brother, or just how Mary became blind (in one book, she can see. In the next, she is blind. No mention of how it happened IIRC) Some of the characters in the series are composites of real-life people, and some of the events are described in a more subjective manner.

    Even knowing this, I still think it's a good series for children to read, especially with the illustrations by Garth Williams. Although some of the darkest stuff was cut out of the story, there's still plenty enough difficulties experienced by the Ingallses to make today's average kid appreciate the conveniences they have. Back then, the Ingallses could not just pop by Wal-Mart when they needed something, there were no video games or Netflix for entertainment, no AC/heating system, medicine was very limited especially if you lived in the backcountry, etc etc.

    One caveat is that the series was written in the 1930s, and PC was not a thing back then, so there is some derogatory language associated with Native Americans, and there is also a slanted view regarding the government and homesteading. So if you're getting this series for kids, it's important to have a discussion with them about that.

    Overall a good series, educational so far as to how difficult life could be in these times, and different cultural/societal norms of the 1870s-1880s.

  • Laurel

    I absolutely ADORED these books as a little girl. I just finished revisiting each book in the series, and I think I enjoyed them even more as an adult. It's a wonderful look at American life in the Midwest as the first pioneers settled in what was then unknown territory. I loved hearing about their adventures as they traveled from one new settlement to another, and of all they overcame along the way. It's nearly impossible not to fall in love with the Ingalls family, who are each filled with such optimism, strength and spirit.

    Of course, as an adult, some things struck me a bit differently than as a child. As much as I still adored Pa for his sense of adventure and obvious love of his family, I did question some of his decisions as he risked his family's lives moving them to one new location after another. The descriptions of "the Indians" also made me cringe a little, especially in Little House on the Prairie. I had to remind myself that those were the times; that the new settlers feared Native Americans, and Native Americans feared the new settlers. Pa does remind his family that "the Indians" are just the same as anyone else and that they only want to be treated fairly and given rights to their land. There is also a sense of compassion for them as they are later driven from their territory. Still, it all made me a bit uncomfortable. As did some of the stuff on women's rights, such as when Laura tells Almanzo she doesn't feel women should be given the right to vote. But again, this was the late 1800s. Things were quite different then.

    Overall, this is a wonderful collection of books with a lot to teach about early American life and the importance of family, honor, values and perseverance.

  • Melody

    After a couple of days immersed in this series for the first time in I don't know how many years, I'm left bemused in a lot of ways.

    From a historical standpoint, there's little else out there for kids that is this rich and complete. The everyday details that make up a pioneer life are lovingly dwelt upon in a way that's just far enough removed that even the littlest reader doesn't panic. After all, if they all starved to death in The Long Winter, there wouldn't be a next book, would there?

    From a modern, perhaps revisionist standpoint, I was uncomfortable with the hate that boiled out of Ma every time she talked about Indians. I didn't like the way Pa treated his family, the way he got the most potatoes, the way he dragged them from pillar to post on a whim. So many of the things I didn't like were cultural and I feel as if I haven't any right to not like them, if that makes any sense. It's the way things were then, and ought to be presented as such. Those who don't remember their history and all that.

    I dig the messages about self-sufficiency, I found the descriptions of how to craft houses and furniture and food out of prairie sod and a few cottonwood trees to be fascinating and useful.

    But I don't much like the Ingalls family. I haven't a thing in common with any of them, I don't think. I'm walking away for the last time with some fond memories, and that's enough.

  • Camille

    These books are a portal to a time in history long gone, told through the perspective of a child as she grows and experiences her interesting life. I absolutely loved these books growing up and wanted to crawl into the pages and live alongside Laura. They will forever hold a very special place in my heart. <3

  • Kristen

    Domestic life back in the day might not be quite as cozy or cornucopia as these stories suggest. But I worked out my own personal truths about the Little House Books and why the stories live in my blood. It’s my way of making peace with yet another childhood relic facing the wrath of actuality.

    Truth #1. Christmas is always better in a log cabin on the prairie when you have nothing.

    Remember Mr. Edwards crossing the wild creek to bring the Christmas presents from Santa Claus? Remember the new tin cup, the stick of peppermint candy, a heart-shaped cake? Remember Ma asking them if their stockings were empty?

    “Then they put their hands down inside them to make sure. And in the very toe of each stocking was a shining bright, new penny! They had never even thought of such a thing as having a penny. Think of having a whole penny for your very own. Think of having a cup and a cake and a stick of candy and a penny. There never had been such a Christmas.”

    Let’s face it, if you’re ecstatic about receiving a penny, albeit a shiny penny, you live in an entirely different universe than the one today with expectant kids opening smart phones, x-box machines, and six hundred piece Lego sets. Christmas on the frontier lacked frantic materialism. Laura understood at a very basic level the difference between nothing and something, between molasses and white sugar, between poverty and a penny.

    In each book, Christmas is always a monumental event usually with its own chapter that never fails to create a sort of pithy yearning in the modern reader. The chapter usually includes such details as Pa whittling flowers and birds into a wood bracket for Ma, Laura receiving Charlotte her first rag doll, the aforementioned pennies, the Boasts showing up on Christmas Eve at Silver Lake, the secret makings of mittens, neckties, aprons, and handkerchiefs knitted of thin lawn, the Youth’s Companions saved to read on Christmas day, cans of oysters which apparently were quite a treat, popped kernels, Almanzo coming from Minnesota with oranges, and my favorite- the Christmas tree at the church with the little fur cape and muff saved for Laura. The very fur cape and muff that upstage the infamous Nellie Oleson.

    Oh to be content with a penny of your very own! To have a moment fully realized, to yearn for nothing else. For sheer joy to wash down to your bones. To be content with a one room cabin, Pa-made furniture, and white sugar only when company came. To find your true gifts in the natural world: The rippling grass and enormous sky. The plum thickets and cattle paths. The sheet of silver water and tall wild grass of Silver Lake. The tangles of wild grapevines and wind blowing through the cottonwoods. Gifts savored with appetites void of distractions, without the clutter of too many presents under the tree.

    Truth #2- Don’t believe everything you read about Pa.

    I love Pa. I might have even been in love with him at some point with his wild hair and fiddle playing and his “Where’s my little half-pint of sweet cider half drunk up?” Seriously, Pa could do anything. Build a log cabin, fashion furniture from trees, dig a well, construct a fish trap with scraps of wood, twist hay into sticks for burning, follow the clothesline to the stable to feed the livestock during a blizzard, cross a roaring creek, outsmart a pack of wolves, survive for three days in a snow bank during a blizzard, play the fiddle like a choke cherry tree quivering in the wind, melt lead to make bullets, kill animals to feed his family, build the rocking chair of all rocking chairs for Ma, win the town spelling bee, trap and skin animals, plow a wheat field, plow a corn field, save the house from a prairie fire.

    However, on the internet, there are certain innuendos about Pa. Quite a few bloggers attribute the family’s several moves and financial loses as proof that Pa was either a good-for-nothing lazybones or an opportunist charlatan.

    “So in reality, Pa ends up being rather a jerk,” one blogger opined.

    Be still my heart. If Pa wasn’t a decent, hard-working guy wouldn’t the entire premise of the stories falls apart?

    In the books, there is always a really good reason for the moving ons and starting overs and Laura certainly didn’t seem to mind them since she personified wanderlust. In the big woods, the land was settling up and food was becoming scarce. No more bears and deer meat to survive those long winter months. The Indians and the government drove them from the little house on the prairie. And surely Pa couldn’t be held responsible for the plague of grasshoppers that devoured his wheat crop on the very eve of harvest while they lived on the banks of Plum Creek. Later, the long winter stalled their homestead progress and blackbirds ate the corn.

    In reality, there might be some truth in the assertion of Pa’s opportunistic tendencies. Apparently, he knew the land in Kansas wasn’t cleared to be settled yet. There’s also the part between Plum Creek and Silver Lake when Laura and Mary worked in a hotel in Burr Oak, Iowa and boarded with other people. I can’t imagine Pa and Ma paying rent and not living in spaces as wide and vast as a prairie. With this knowledge, I thought it rather interesting when I reread the following in the first chapter of Little Town. Pa has just asked Laura if she’d like to work in town. To which Ma exclaims, “No, Charles, I won’t have Laura working out in a hotel among all kinds of strangers.”

    “Who said such a thing?” Pa demanded. “No girl of ours’ll do that, not while I’m alive and kicking.”

    But apparently two girls of his did do exactly that while he was alive and kicking.

    So Pa was a complicated man and maybe not as idyllic as the books suggest. Still, Laura chose to portray Pa as hardworking, witty, brave, larger-than-life. Maybe he’s the Pa Laura wanted or believed or remembered. I’m sure in actuality Charles Ingalls was somewhere in between the good-for-nothing bloke and mighty Paul Bunyon. It’s a bit reassuring that he might not have been king of the castle in everyway. (He did dwindle down to skin and bones during the long winter and could be found cursing the wind and snow.) I’ve made my own peace in the realization that it doesn’t matter to me if the real Charles Ingalls was this way or that way. I have Pa from the books and that is the way I choose to remember him. Even if fictional, Pa fulfilled a vital purpose in my young life. He personified the kind, fierce father, the protector of little girls. He took them to abandoned Indian camps and carried deserted beads home in his handkerchief. He knew the answers to vital questions such as how a panther sounds when it screams and why Laura wanted that Indian papoose with the black eyes. And Pa was brave! Remember when he hit a bear over the head with a club because he didn’t have his gun? (True, the bear ended up being a tree stump that Pa mistook as a bear in the darkening woods but it takes the same amount of courage to attack a tree you honestly believe is a bear as it takes to attack a real bear.)

    Truth #3- I was born in the wrong era.

    Yep, I mean it. I’m sticking to it. The Little House books have always created a sense of longing in me (and countless other little girls) to live in a log house. And even as an adult, I still wonder if I’ve been cheated by being born into this techno-crazy world. Sure life was hard back then and the thought of an unheated house, baths only once a week and untreatable malaria hardly sounds like a vacation. Still, they had roasted pig’s tail and country dances and buggy-rides!

    Despite the abundant amount of information at our fingertips today, there seems a lack of critical thinking, a lack of wisdom. No one I know, including myself, can divide sums without a calculator or recite from memory the entire American history like Laura did at the school exhibition.

    In actuality, I’m sure the Ingalls found plenty of tedious moments. For instance, we never hear about the outhouse situation in the little books. Wouldn’t that have caused some serious headache during one of those three day blizzards? And how much of their life was spent fetching water, kneading dough, washing dishes, sewing even stitches on a bodice? Most of their time and energy was spent on providing shelter, warmth, food and clothing. But for me, this single-mindedness is the appeal. There is no therapy like work. They didn’t have time to wonder how their parents ruined their childhood or if they should vaccinate their children or if the food they ate caused cancer. (Although, Ma did believe watermelon caused Fever’n’ague. Pa ate an entire one by himself anyway.) Mostly, they were grateful for food even if it was blackbird pie.

    Out on the prairie or in the little town, strangers aided each other in times of illness or distress. People needed each other for survival. I wonder if their perspective focused more on the eternal because death lurked in the corner. Although I’d never say their lives were easier or even simpler, I do believe the reality of their situation forced them to face the bigger questions more often. They dug to the roots of life more often because they had fewer distractions obscuring their view like overgrown ivy. For some reason that sounds mighty appealing to me.

    Truth #4- A fictional story is no less beneficial and authentic than a true story.

    I think I came to this conclusion early in life, growing up on Narnia and Nancy Drew and Beverly Cleary. Then came Jane Eyre and My Name is Asher Lev and Housekeeping. All books that expanded and latticed my life with beauty. Yet in society, there is generally greater value placed on a true story than on a fictional one. Ask James Frey. A friend once told me she couldn’t justify reading fiction because she wasn’t learning anything. Apparently, fiction equates a lack of truth. In this vein, Laura and her daughter Rose took great pains to assert that every word of the books were true, thus creating the controversy when facts proved otherwise.

    Yet stories, true or not, live in our blood and give meaning to our lives. Some of the greatest lessons are taught through fiction. Jesus himself taught eternal truths through parables. I’ve come to the conclusion that it doesn’t matter to me whether every word in the Little House books reflects reality. Maybe it was never the “true” aspect of Little House that bewitched me. Maybe it was the way the books carried me out of the real world and into another “real” world that just might exist because this Laura person really did exist. The stories have become a part of me, as real as a childhood memory. They vibrate in my background like the wind chimes on my front porch. The idea of the log cabin made with Pa’s bare hands (and Ma’s until she sprained her ankle) still tangle up around me like wisteria.

    ----------

    With Little House, I still find some sort of hoary comfort from reading about maple dripping from trees and squash stacked up in the attic. The stories are rustic safe. The Ingalls experienced hard times, but the stories seem to unfold and move beneath a safe paraffin-like surface. A surface not unlike the glossy pages in the full-colored collector’s set. Nothing scratching their beauty. No matter how many grasshoppers ate the wheat or how many blizzards attacked the house or how many times Nellie called Mary and Laura “country girls,” Ma was always home cooking her baked beans and no yeast bread and Pa’s gun hung over the doorway on two wooden pegs.

    Oh, to play catch with a pig’s bladder! To wear a brown poplin to church (and have a cat climb up your hoops) or slide on the ice of Silver Lake and escape the wolves. To sleep in a hay ticked bed. To be thrilled with syrup squiggles in the snow or to wade in a creek with the water-bugs. To draw a dripping bucket of cold, fresh water from the well. To look through an open window at a pack of wolves. To slide down a golden straw-stack or gallop across the land clutching handfuls of a pony’s mane. To hear the horse bells in the frigid air coming to take you away from the horrid Mrs.
    Brewster's for the weekend.

  • Ann☕

    This series brought to mind fond memories of when I initially read these semi-autobiographical novels as a child. I had forgotten how good the writing actually is, including the vivid use of imagery surrounding the pioneer life of the Ingalls family. The 19th century racism that makes an occasional appearance in the stories are unfortunate remnants of some of the beliefs held during that time period. Otherwise most of the stories are sweet and mostly optimistic, even during periods of drought, blizzards and other hardships. Laura is a very likeable character, whose spirited 'outdoorsy' nature sometimes gets her into trouble but also brings some humor to the books.

    The ninth book in the series titled, The First Four Years, is actually thought to be an unedited first draft and it ended up being my least favorite book in the series. On the plus side, the illustrations by Garth Williams are lovely bonus that added another layer of depth to the story.

  • Amber J

    Another set I read when I was younger. I think I've read them all at this point, but not in any order. I read a few for school projects, a few for myself, and a few to mom as a teen, this is another set I would like to try a reread for.

  • Lori

    Most people love these novels, and I can't for the life of me understand why. I was given the collection growing up and read them, but I never cared much for them and never re-read them.

  • mai-linh nguyen

    these books made my childhood amazing

  • Isla

    I actually read these books at the interesting age of 8.

    I was completely obsessed with Laura and Mary. For some reason I liked to relate myself to Mary but then she went blind after getting scarlet fever and it kinda ruined it for me if I’m being honest. Typical Mary *eyeroll*

    I loved them so much that I literally dressed up as Laura for world book day and I wore a bonnet and pinny with a FLOOR LENGTH GOWN. I was dedicated.

    When the dog died a large part of me died with it. Same with the cat who was mentioned a couple times and they just LEFT IT BEHIND IN THEIR STUPID CABIN IN THE WOODS

    Also Mary and Laura do be #girlbosses for walking 7 miles to school everyday

    But yes, between the ages of 8-10 I probably would have given an arm and a leg for this book series

  • midnightfaerie

    Little House on the Prairie by Laura Ingalls Wilder is an exquisite set of books that I cherished growing up. Read until they were dog-eared, this series has to be one of my childhood favorites. A story about a young girl growing up on the frontier, it was so popular they made it into a T.V. series even though the series didn't do it justice. Stories as a young girl I could relate to, the mean girl in town, fights with my sisters, and just the struggles of everyday life of any family. The love Ma and Pa had for each other showed through so much so, that even today I can still see Caroline's eye's sparkling bright blue as Pa whirled her around the dance floor. This series is a perfect example of a story well told. When you're there in Laura's life so much that you can feel her fear when in trouble, or you can taste the penny candy on Christmas, that's a story. I have no doubt this will be a children's classic for years to come. I highly recommend it.


    ClassicsDefined.com

  • The Celtic Rebel (Richard)

    I began reading this series in the 4th grade and I think read the last one during my 6th grade or the summer before. I loved back then to read all kinds of stuff but books about history or rural settings just spoke to me. I think even then I was destined to be forever in love with history. I loved the adventurous nature of Pa and Ma Ingalls, products of a time in history when men and women had the pioneering nature that whether right or wrong was the history of the United States. They lived in a generation when many grew up hearing the stories of how their fathers or grandfathers crossed the ocean looking for a better life. About how brave they were. They wanted that same adventure. They were being tempted by a government offering free land and hearing everyone say just go west to the promised land.

    The Little House series is about a portion of the history of the United States and how a young girl witnessed it. Laura Ingalls Wilder has endeared the Ingalls family to many young and old readers alike. Yes they are simple but even as an adult I still enjoy reading them today.

  • Lisa

    I have, ever since I was 8 and received a box set of the "Little House" books, adored each and every single one of them. In over 20 years, my feelings towards these books haven't changed one iota. They are easy to read, and chock full of information about life as a young pioneer girl. How many times did I wish I could taste Ma's vanity cakes, or see Mary's college dress in person? These books are so fascinating, for anyone remotely interested in history, that it makes it impossible to put them down.

    The writing itself is fine. Let us remember that Laura Ingalls Wilder was a teacher in the late 1800's, and that she always received top marks in grammar and reading. Even looking over her books now, as persnickety as I am about poor spelling/grammar/editing, while her language is simplistic, there is nothing wrong with the way she writes.

    These books are meant to be treasured.

  • Dale Pearl

    My teacher gave these to me in first grade. She was impressed that I had taught myself how to read and I was such a well spoken child at an early age. What went wrong with me?

    Well these books are an all time classic. I remember staying up all night reading the stories with the blanket over my head and my brothers flashlight shining on the pages. They kept me up all night and I so miss the books, the movies, but even more so the morality that was so simple and logical that it makes me stop wondering what went wrong with me but what went wrong with my country to dispel the fine, outstanding morals of this time and place.

  • Lilly

    This series was the one that jump started my reading. I almost despised reading up until the day when 8 year-old me picked up “The Little House in the Big Woods” determined that since my older sister had read them so could no matter how much I knew I’d dislike it. In the first chapter I was already enjoying myself. I read one after another of this series and I’ve loved reading ever since (though I’m still not as fast a reader as my sister).
    I’ve read through them myself twice since then and also participated in listening most nights when my mom was reading through them to my younger siblings before bed last year.

  • Lydia

    I started reading this set to my school kids. We are on the second book. These books are timeless and the kids love them. When I pulled out Little House in the Big Woods and told them it was our next storytime book, I got waving hands and big smiles. They said things like, "I love those books," and "Those are my favorite books."

  • Beverly

    Sweet and ideal, but shockingly real in some ways.

  • RajeanaP

    I really wish I had read this as a young girl, but sadly, I was the right age for the TV show then and never considered picking up the books. I always thought the show and the books were essentially the same, but as an adult, I understand how rare that truly ever is. Anyway, I had an opportunity to listen to the series' audiobooks and remembered how much I loved the show, so I gave it a go. I loved the audiobooks. The narrator was great--how she sang all those songs still confounds me. The romance was so sweet--something I would have adored as a young reader--but different than the romance portrayed in the TV show. I still couldn't help seeing the books through my memories of the TV show. The actors ARE the characters in my minds; there's no way to NOT imagine Melissa Gilbert and Michael Landon as the MCs. And to this day, Dean Butler still makes me swoon.

    If nothing else, the books confirmed for me that I could never be a pioneer. There's no question that I'll be one of the first eaten by zombies in the coming apocalypse....