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Half Pint ping
1 posted on 01/13/2015 4:48:15 AM PST by TurboZamboni
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To: TurboZamboni
What an absolutely gorgeous girl

Laura Ingalls Wilder

2 posted on 01/13/2015 4:53:52 AM PST by knarf
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To: TurboZamboni

BFL


4 posted on 01/13/2015 5:01:00 AM PST by Old Sarge (Its the Sixties all over again, but with crappy music...)
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To: TurboZamboni

Little House was great both the books and the show (what happened to shows like that and Brady Bunch?). Compare Little House to trash like ‘Two and a half men’.


5 posted on 01/13/2015 5:32:11 AM PST by ExCTCitizen (I'm ExCTCitizen and I approve this reply. If it does offend Libs, I'm NOT sorry...)
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To: TurboZamboni

Her home and museum at Mansfield, Missouri is well worth the visit. The wife and I are endowment sponsors.

She started her career as an author somewhat late in life and has a great life story. You can see the home where she lived while writing her autobiographical stories.


7 posted on 01/13/2015 5:40:46 AM PST by KC Burke (I know my screen name says KC but I'm in AZ now!)
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To: TurboZamboni

Pioneer Girl is for adults or teens. The subject matter includes an attempted molestation and domestic violence (a family in town). From what I could gather, it is intended for those who read the books as children but realize that her life wasn’t all non-problematic.


8 posted on 01/13/2015 5:42:04 AM PST by momtothree
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To: TurboZamboni
I still remember sitting in a one room class containing grades K-6, located on the Minnesota prairie, listening to the teacher read all of Wilder's books - while Wilder was still alive. We had strict gun control in the school, too - anyone bringing a loaded gun to school actually had to unload it, and leave it in the coat room.

Though this school was only a few miles from what is now "Lake Woebegone Trail", it was clearly quite different from the schools around Lake Woebegone. I learned none of the nonsense taught there.

9 posted on 01/13/2015 5:42:40 AM PST by norwaypinesavage (The Stone Age did not end because we ran out of stones)
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To: TurboZamboni

We read all the books to our children.
One think we got from it was that her father was just absolutely nuts. Every time he got something established and working, he’d decide the neighbors were getting to close, pull up stakes and move his family further west.
The worst book is The Long Winter, where the Ingalls family nearly starves to death in the Dakota’s territory. I am still very surprised they didn’t come down with scurvy.


10 posted on 01/13/2015 5:51:15 AM PST by Little Ray (How did I end up in this hand-basket, and why is it getting so hot?)
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To: TurboZamboni
Her daughter Rose (mentioned in the article) was an important Libertarian writer in her time.
In the early 1940s, despite continuing requests from editors for both fiction and non-fiction material, other than helping her mother produce the final volumes of the "Little House" series, Lane turned away from commercial fiction writing and became known as one of the most influential American libertarians of the middle 20th century. She vehemently opposed the New Deal, perceived "creeping socialism," Social Security, wartime rationing and all forms of taxation, claiming she ceased writing highly paid commercial fiction to protest paying income taxes. Living on her small salary from her newspaper column, and no longer needing to support her parents or adopted sons, she cut expenses to the bare minimum, and lived a modern-day version of her ancestors' pioneer life on her rural land near Danbury, Connecticut. She gained some media attention for her refusal to accept a ration card, instead working cooperatively with her rural neighbors to grow and preserve fruits and vegetables, and to raise chickens and pigs for meat. Literary critic and political writer Isabel Paterson had urged the move to Connecticut, where she would be only "up country a few miles" from Paterson, who had been a friend for many years.[8]

A staunch opponent of communism after experiencing it first hand in the Soviet Union during her Red Cross travels, Lane's initial writings on individualism and conservative government began while she was still writing popular fiction in the 1930s, and culminated with the seminal The Discovery of Freedom (1943). After this point, she tirelessly promoted and wrote about individual freedom, and its impact on humanity. The same year also saw the publication of Isabel Paterson's The God of the Machine and Ayn Rand's novel The Fountainhead, and the three women have been referred to as the founding mothers of the American libertarian movement with the publication of these works.[9]

Writer Albert Jay Nock wrote that Lane's and Paterson's nonfiction works were "the only intelligible books on the philosophy of individualism that have been written in America this century." The two women had "shown the male world of this period how to think fundamentally ... They don't fumble and fiddle around – every shot goes straight to the centre." Journalist John Chamberlain credits Rand, Paterson and Lane with his final "conversion" from socialism to what he called "an older American philosophy" of libertarian and conservative ideas.[10]

In 1943, Lane was thrust into the national spotlight through her response to a radio poll on Social Security. She mailed in a post-card with a response likening the Social Security system to a Ponzi scheme that would ultimately destroy the US. The subsequent events remain unclear, but wartime monitoring of the mails eventually resulted in a Connecticut State Trooper being dispatched to her farmhouse (supposedly at the request of the FBI) to question her motives. Lane's vehement response to this infringement on her right of free speech resulted in a flurry of newspaper articles and the publishing of a pamphlet, "What is this, the Gestapo?," that was meant to remind Americans to be watchful of their rights, despite the wartime exigencies. . She broke with her old friend and political ally, Isabel Paterson in 1946,[11] and, in the 1950s, had an acrimonious correspondence with writer Max Eastman.[12]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rose_Wilder_Lane#The_Discovery_of_Freedom
12 posted on 01/13/2015 6:05:18 AM PST by Straight Vermonter (Posting from deep behind the Maple Curtain)
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To: TurboZamboni

Loved those books when I was a girl. I still have the whole set.


15 posted on 01/13/2015 6:19:13 AM PST by DoodleDawg
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To: TurboZamboni

Thanks for posting this and the wander down memory lane.
Loved the books growing up but always had a problem with her courting a guy with the name Almanzo...


30 posted on 01/13/2015 7:48:41 AM PST by matginzac
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To: Mrs. B.S. Roberts

read later.....


38 posted on 01/13/2015 10:23:03 AM PST by Mrs. B.S. Roberts
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