Sixteen-year-old Rose travels to Crowley, Louisiana to live with her Aunt E. J., a widow, and attend one year of high school. I'm a little puzzled when and why Eliza Jane from the Little House books (not just Farmer Boy, but also Little Town on the Prairie) started to go by E. J. I'm also puzzled where Almanzo's brother Perley and sister Laura came from. I thought in Farmer Boy Almanzo was the youngest and he was about nine? Maybe his family was simplified for the book. And now that I think about it, Almanzo called Laura "Bess" because he already had a sister Laura.
I liked reading how Rose reacted to being in a city after growing up on the farm. The Little House books paint rural life as wholesome and wonderful, but Rose felt ashamed of her roots and eagerly embraced city life. I wonder if the difference in attitude is because Laura always had sisters as company, because Laura was more of a homebody than Rose, or if it was just that times were changing. Rose was quite the spitfire. When the Principal asks her how she liked her teachers, she answers frankly, "Not very well." Then she decides to be valedictorian with the highest Latin grade, out of spite. Then she subversively slips a socialist message into her valedictory poem by writing it in alternating Latin lines. This is not to mention keeping company with Mr. Skidmore.
My favorite story is when Mr. McCarthy gets their maid, Viola, kicked out of town for rejecting his advances. E. J. starts stopping by Mr. McCarthy's office and leaving him writings, for instance a copy of the Emancipation Proclamation, or Bible verses. Finally Mr. McCarthy agrees to let Viola return. I'm surprised the tactic worked. To quote Laura's Ma: Patience will wear out a stone.
I also loved the French-speaking Catholic Odile Boudreaux, who works in her father's bakery and has siblings Oliver, Octave, Onesia, Ovide, Ophelia, Olivia, Opta, Odalia, Odelia, Olite, Otta, and Omea. !!! Thirteen!!!