MacBride called himself "the adopted grandson" of writer and political theorist Rose Wilder Lane, the daughter of writer Laura Ingalls Wilder, and as such laid claim to the substantial Ingalls-Wilder's literary estate, including the "Little House on the Prairie" franchise. He is the author of record of three additional "Little House" books, and began the "Rocky Ridge Years" series, describing the Ozark childhood of Rose Wilder Lane. He also co-produced the 1970s television series Little House on the Prairie.
Controversy came after MacBride's death in 1995, when the local library in Mansfield, Missouri, contended that Wilder's original will gave her daughter ownership of the literary estate for her lifetime only, all rights to revert to the Laura Ingalls Wilder Library after her death. The ensuing court case was settled in an undisclosed manner, but MacBride's heirs retained the rights.
4.5 stars & 5/10 hearts. The Laura books never make me cry, but the Rose books keep making me tear up! There are a few euphemisms; also the constant wonder about babies bothered me a little; and I was bugged by Rose’s crush on Abe. Otherwise, I really enjoyed it. I used to say I wanted more about Laura & Almanzo—these books fulfilled my desires! I love Laura more and more throughout these books; and somehow they stir me more, for I know how hard her life was and I desperately want her to have a good life now. I’m just wolfing down these books—they are so good! There’s so much drama at times but also so much beauty, and so much humour... <3 I do know that these books are not as good as the Laura books, and there are beginning signs of why Rose turned into the woman she became. But personally, I don’t think these books are meant to be read as even part biography. It’s pretty much fiction and that’s the way they should be read. And when you read it that way, these are happy, sweet, & lovely books. But I understand that these books aren’t for everyone. Edited, these are suitable for readers 12+; unedited, ages 16+.
*I do plan to reread these books next year to see what I think of them then; review subject to revision/updates*
Another fun read-aloud for my 3 girls! We especially loved everything leading up to the exciting last chapter, which was definitely everyone's favorite part.
I liked the description of the ice storm. The seasons of the Ozarks are different than they were in the Dakotas and I really enjoy seeing the contrast to the weather events we read about when Laura was a little girl.
3.5 stars. My littles have loved having me read this to them and they'd probably rate it much higher. But, to me, it just doesn't have the same magic as the original Little House series.
I've been saving my reviews of the non-Laura Ingalls stories until the end of each series. I just can't seem to hold back with this book, though.
The first two books in the Rose Wilder series was very promising. In fact, I liked the second better than the first one. Unfortunately, that isn't the case with this book.
Truthfully, and I will be completely honest, this one was absolute torture for me to read. I actually considered stopping it when I got to the halfway point. I disliked it that much. Yet, I was determined to make it through it. I have owned this series for years and I never got around to reading them until now. And I want to read the entire series. I want to accomplish this "little" goal in life. But when something is as dull, and annoying, as this book was, I don't know if I will be able to accomplish it because the goal suddenly seems much larger to achieve.
It was dull because the "stories" are just NOT that interesting. At least they aren't that interesting to me. Personally, I don't even see how a younger girl would be interested in any of it.
It is annoying because of the way that it is written. I don't know what the real Almanzo and Laura were like. So, I guess I don't know if there is any truth to these characters at all. Based on Laura's stories, I highly doubt the "characters" that she created in her books would turn out to be the ones in this book. I will be completely honest again and say that if THAT is how Laura REALLY was, I absolutely HATE her! I am so tired of her being this stereotypical farm wife with stories to tell and having a bunch of morals to throw at her kid to show that she knows best (to lecture Rose that money doesn't grow on trees when she used the money that was given to her on whatever she wanted for a special day like Independence Day - was that really anything other than a little mean?).
Why is "jiminy" the universal word there? Not only does Almanzo say it, but, amazingly, so do all of the people down there in Missouri. And he was saying it before he made it down there. I am not saying people didn't use the word. It just sounds "forced" for a person to say it. Even in a book.
How many times do I have to read about the way their eyes react to a situation, the "crinkles" (or what it "wrinkles"? - I don't know - it is the same difference) by Almanzo's eyes when he smiled, and the "twirling" of his mustache? Why? Why do these things HAVE to be written OVER and OVER again??
And what is up with Laura blushing EVERY time Almanzo embraces her in some sort of way? By this time she had been married for quite a few years and had given birth to two children. I HIGHLY doubt that woman would be blushing when her husband gave her a kiss, in the privacy of their home, under the mistletoe - and wherever else it happened! GIVE ME A BREAK!!!!
Now, I will read the rest of the series. Of course I will. Money was spent on them. They have been sitting here for years. I will read them. All I can HOPE is that they will get better, that they will be more like the first two books. If they aren't, I don't know what state I will be in when I get finished with them. I have read so many books that I have not liked lately that I don't know how many more I can take.
January 2nd and I am already hating the first book that I read. That is such a shame. But onto the next! I will make it through these! I just have to keep telling myself that and, hopefully, I will do it.
This book begins at the start of the Wilder's second year on the farm. Despite some challenges, including freezing rain and thus needing to de-ice the orchard, it's obvious that the weather is indeed better for the family. There isn't the EXTREME weather of the prairie.
I like how Laura differentiates between rich-rich and farmer-rich. Rose's confusion is perfect for her age (she turns 9 in this book). Her jealousy and desire for Abe to stay nearby would also be cute because of the age, though it turns not-so-nice.
Despite her youth, Rose finds herself between two worlds: that of an educated young woman (like the "townies") and that of a prairie/farmer girl. Her life mirrors Laura's in that sense, though she has friends in both and is a bit less stubborn about it than Laura was.
The Wilders celebrate a first real Thanksgiving and Christmas on the farm. Everything with Christmas is heartwarming. We are giving a beautiful example of how giving can take away dark thoughts and spread joy.
I think it's awesome that Blanche talks about motorized cars being in Chicago. It's also fun to read how bees were followed for their honey, and to make a beegum. Though, after readingAnimosity, I almost feel bad for the bees!
I had to look up a few things: ~ sorghum (used for molasses) ~ fascinator ~ union suit The inclusion of the latter two continues with the LH focus on showing how fashions change with the times.
I found the following pretty interesting: ~ People only paid school taxes if a child went to that school. ~ Abe says that his father believed that a farmer didn't need to read to harvest food. Laura agrees that used to be the case, but then argues that understanding how to at least read price changes and new trends had become more essential. We certain skills even now being more necessary, while other skills may fade. ~ Rose is still not allowed to move up to the Fourth Reader because of her age. I'm glad we allow students to move up according to ability, or at least provide more advanced opportunities among those of a similar age, if enough students can do it.
This is the third book in the series about Rose Wilder, Laura and Almanzo’s daughter and their life “in the land of the big red apple”. (Which isn’t New York.)
This is more of the same, as the earlier two books. Again, it’s just a series of anecdotes, little storylines patched together over a short period of time. Some of it is quite interesting- finding out how to “course” bees for example, or the building of their first “proper” house (larger and with an upstairs bedroom).
But really, what I’m discovering, is that reading these books makes you hungry! All I want is fried chicken after reading these. It’s very similar to reading the Enid Blyton books (pick a random one, any one, I’ll guarantee you’ll be hungry by the first couple of chapters), when all they talk about is midnight feasts and picnics.
Again, this book takes place in what feels like six-nine months or so. So a lot of little stories, spread thinly across a short period of time. It starts just before Christmas and finishes in September or thereabouts. And what I’m starting to notice, is that the books always end on a happy note - for example, the final chapter is a wedding. (Not for Rose!) There’s no cliffhangers in this neck of the woods, and nothing really to make you move onto the rest of the series (unlike me, who bought them all.).
These are easy and enjoyable to read, but very formulaic. You don’t need to engage the brain for anything here, and you’ll speed through the book in no time.
This is a review that by necessity must be full of caveats. If you're just looking for a continuation of the Little House books for a budding reader, they're very much in the same vein in the day to day of not quite subsistence farming and not bad at all. But if you've read Caroline Fraser's excellent Prairie Fires about the lives and mythmaking of both Laura Ingalls Wilder and daughter Rose Wilder Lane, you quickly realize this series like the original is a lot of romanticized and highly fictionalized nonsense that could at times be quite hamfisted into trying further both women's own extreme politics and idealizing the heroic settler pioneer. Worse, they're written by someone who never knew Laura at all and because of Rose's decidedly odd proclivities in "adopting" various young men until they no longer suited her, lucked into getting control of the entire Wilder estate and copyrights.
Third book in the series. Stuff happens. They're still struggling.
This is one of a short series following Rose Wilder, daughter of Laura Ingalls Wilder, after they moved to an apple farm in Missouri. Rose is about 8 and the tone of the books is very similar to the originals. I don't know how much is fact and how much is speculation about various events, but it's a nice update to the original series.
This book felt simple (in the best way.) That was one of my favorite things about the original stories. It’s so funny to me because when I read ma and pa I still picture Charles and Caroline! I would really love to read the books from Caroline’s point of view as well as Laura’s grandmother and great grandmother.
4.5 stars I really liked the way nature was discussed in this book, as well as the shorter stories told throughout that gave us a picture of the state of the country through this one family's experience. I thought this was one of the better, if not the best, of the Rocky Ridge books. 4.5 stars.
Rose and her parents went to Alva’s to help her family knock the leaves off the sorghum canes to make molasses. Alva told her about the candy breaking her sister had. It’s a kissing game, where their mom broke stick candies in half and put them in a bowl with a towel over it. Girls would come over all dressed up, and the boys would have to pay a nickel for the candy. He would reach on and pick a piece of candy then have his favorite girl pick a peace. If she chose the same color he would have to kiss her. If she didn’t, another boy tried. The boys cheated and saved their pieces and traded them until they each had a different color and everyone was kissing everyone else.
Abe and Effie were talking together and she was giggling at times as she stirred the juice. Rose thought she saw Effie blush a couple times.
Rose had brought her autograph book for Alva to write in, but Alva got mad because she didn’t know how to write, and scorned the book and the city girls Rose had made friends with.
At breakfast the next morning, Almanzo said Effie’s as pretty a girl as you’ll find. He looked at Abe with a raised eyebrow and a twinkle in his eye. Abe said Mm-hmm and his neck colored. Almanzo said she’d make some fella a mighty good catch. He reckoned that before too much longer some sharp fellow would start sparking (courting) with her and before you know it she’ll up and marry him. Abe’s cheeks flushed pink. Laura told Manly to leave the poor boy alone.
Rose asked Laura later if she and Almanzo had gone sparking. Laura said didn’t court at first. She was 15 and Manly was 26. While she was out teaching with this horrible family, Manly came to pick her up and brought her home for the weekend. He did that for many weekends but Laura told him she was grateful for his kindness but it didn’t mean a thing at all. After years of buggy rides they finally started courting.
Rose said she wanted to go sparking with Abe and Effie. Laura lost it laughing at her, and Rose was so mad. Then she realized she was jealous of Effie because she liked Abe.
Abe made her a corn doll when they were shucking corn, and she thanked him and hugged him and he blushed.
On Thanksgiving Laura put three kernels of parched corn on the edge of each plate to remind them of the hardships the Pilgrims faced their first winter in Massachusetts.
Rose and Paul and George went into the caves and the torch fell in the water and they got lost. It was so cute how Fido came to save them. They followed his bark out of the cave.
Almanzo got her a donkey for her 9th birthday, and I was surprised she was so happy with it considering she had compared the donkeys to the colts and found them ugly and all. He would stop and refuse to walk on the way to school, and threw her off, and was stubborn and stopped to eat. During class he was braying and she asked if she could go talk to him about not fighting. That was cute.
I felt so bad for Vernice, the girl who wore the asafoetida that stank so bad the kids were making fun of her. She fled to the shed and went to her donkey, and Rose apologized and said she didn’t know about it and didn’t mean to make a joke of it.
It was funny how Rose wondered if she would get sick if she didn’t wear it, wanted to ask Laura but was afraid she’d have to wear it too and would never come to school smelling like that. “It was so hard to know what to do sometimes!”
She went home and asked about it and what would happen if she got sick. It was so sweet she hugged Laura and Manly and told them she loved them.
Manly was working on something in the barn as a Christmas surprise for them. Rose wanted to know what it was but she wasn’t supposed to peak, so she was reaching underneath it when he found her. She said she wasn’t peaking, she was touching, and he choked on a laugh.
It was so cute how Manly took the rifle down and shot mistletoe from the tree and nailed it up in the doorway and kissed Laura.
For Christmas Manly had made Rose a wooden sled. Abe and Swiney came to visit and Swiney was derisive of Rose’s belief in Santa Claus, had never gotten anything and didn’t believe. Manly immediately took Rose aside and asked her to give up her sled to make Swiney a believer. The sled was the only thing for a boy. I was totally with Rose as she got mad at Manly. But she came around quickly and knew it was the right thing to do. Manly even wrote a letter from Santa to go with it, and Laura gave Abe the socks she’d made for Manly.
Rose was so bad in here to make up the lie to Alva that Abe was sparking with another girl. First she accused Alva of lying about Abe going to marry Effie, then she came out with the horrible lie that she’d seen Abe riding in the buggy with another girl. She sank really low and of course she had to come clean about it. Abe came over with his rented buggy because Effie was mad at him and he offered it to Laura and Manly. Rose had to tell the truth, but he wasn’t mad. Laura made her write a letter of apology and that was that. But Abe wasn’t going anywhere so that ended the jealousy that he’d be taken away.
Manly built them a new house, a real house.
It was so interesting how Abe stole the bee hive, put molasses in a box to draw bees in and dropped flour on them to mark them, so when they came back he moved the box closer and closer until he found the hive and they took the honey.
There were some cute moments and stories that made me think of Little House, not anywhere near as good but still nice to have that feeling. Some more heartwarming, cute, and sweet stories. More has happened in terms of major events and things. There weren’t as much pictures in this one. It felt like the writing went extra in detail to try to add length and make up where plot leaves off or not as much detail was known about the real story.
Rose fell off the wagon in this one left and right and it’s really disappointing the things she did. It made me so uncomfortable for her."
It ended so suddenly. I wish it hadn’t left off in that moment but had some type of conclusion. I felt like a lot more happened in this one than the others. Some cute and sweet moments, mixed in with some bad childish antics. Pretty drawn out with excess writing.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I am so impressed with Roger Lea MacBride. I started reading the Little House series to my kids about two years ago and we were all hooked. As a first time reader of the series myself (in my 40's!) I was geeking out. But we were so disappointed with the First Four Years that we didn't even finish it. I had a copy of the first of this series that I had gotten at a used book store and, with low expectations, decided to give it a try as our next read-a-loud. What a pleasant surprise! MacBride was true to the lovable Little House characters and stories and gave Rose a name of her own! After the first book, I tried to find the others at the library and was unsuccessful, and they are temporarily not doing interlibrary loans, so we tried reading Secret Garden in the interim. Wow, my daughter hated it and we all missed Rose terribly. So, I ended up buying the rest of the series new! We simply refer to each book and the whole series as "Rose". What a beautiful tribute to his adopted Grandmother.
Abe and Swiney are still helping Almonzo. The Wilder’s go by the Stubbin’s farm to help harvest sorghum which is boiled into molasses. Alva Stubbin’s older sister Effie is sweet on Abe, Rose gets jealous and tells a lie that he’s “sparking” with a city girl, but then she confesses her lie and all is forgiven. At Thanksgiving Rose goes with Paul and George Cooley into a cave looking for Spanish gold. There is an ice storm. 4th of July picnic day in town and parade, and the story ends with Abe and Effie’s wedding. The Wilder’s neighbors, the Kinnebrews are moving and sell some of their land to them, and Abe and Effie, and Swiney will live in a house on that property.
Pure kindernostalgie, dit boek en dat terwijl ik dit boek als kind niet eens las :-) Maar doordat MacBride zijn schrijfstijl zo hard aanpast aan die van Laura Ingalls Wilder en de boeken natuurlijk over haar dochter gaan, die qua karakter heel erg op haar nu verantwoordelijke moeder Laura lijkt, voel ik mij toch heel erg weer in dat wereldje waarin ik als kind zo graag verdween :-)
The chronicling of Rose Wilder's childhood continues. In this novel, her family continues to work hard on their growing farm in the Ozarks of Missouri. Rose has new adventures at school and at home. A pleasant and informative read.
Good story, along with the others, but I had to skip a few spots. I'm reading them to my eight year old, and this book has a chapter in it about Santa and whether he is real or not, so I had to zip over those few pages so as not to spoil it for her.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The ice storm was so cathartic. I know there a huge difference between the Ozarks in 1902 and KC in 2002, but that storm united then for me. Plus Rose screws up in a very big, very recognizable way, and it's just so refreshingly human.
This is an endearing book. This family goes through a lot of change and works together through the hard and keeps going. They reach out in love and give grace to Swiney & Abe and change their lives forever. Such a great family read aloud!!
Another excellent entry in the Rose Wilder Lane series by her “adopted” grandson. I’m so glad he shared the stories that Rose shared with him! It’s wonderful to get more stories about LIW and Almanzo after they moved to Missouri.
The others were good but this was just a step above, it had the simplicity and sweetness and lessons learned as the original series. Maybe the characters have grown on me and that’s why but I really loved this one