Another Laura Ingalls Wilder book. They're semi-autobiographical books about life growing up as a pioneer girl. This one is just as good as the previous ones. It's more joyful than The Long Winter. In stark contrast to the books like On the Banks of Plum Creek this one sees Laura beginning to spend a lot more time in town, socialising with other people. And it's good to see out heroine having some fun. A lot of the focus of this book is on the family trying to get together enough money to send Laura's sister Mary to college. Laura gets a job in town sewing shirts to help raise money, and sees things she's never seen before, like drunkeness. It's odd to think how taboo it was for a respectable young girl to get a job back then. And of course there's the start of the great romance with Almanzo. Not that Laura really knows what's going on at the time. All in all, despite it being a very different type of book to the earlier ones, this book is still just as charming and engaging and I would highly recommend it.
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