silverflight8: stacked old books (books)
[personal profile] silverflight8
I was thinking about these books the other day - they are the "prequel" books to Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House books, about her maternal grandmother. I remember going to the library - I spent a great deal of time kneeling in the W section and accidentally getting sucked into reading books there, and managed inadvertently to read far more Jacqueline Wilson than I really wanted to, incidentally - being unable to find any other books past Beyond the Heather Hills, and asking the librarian, who also couldn't find anything. Later I found out the author decided to stop writing them - I can't seem to load the original post about it, though I have found Wiley's followup post on her blog about it. She stopped writing them because HarpersCollins started publishing them in miniaturized, abridged versions.

It looks like they are not available in electronic form anywhere. I guess I shouldn't be surprised; they came out in the early 2000's and that was well before public libraries started buying e-copies and that ebooks started selling. Maybe one day they'll be digitized, but it won't be legitimately; HarpersCollins didn't back down when their author said they would stop writing them, and I doubt they would sink more money into the venture. Sigh. I'd really like to own them, but physical copies aren't really doable now, given living space and moving rapidity. This is making me feel rather melancholy. As soon as I can get a library card I'll go check them out, I suppose.
Depth: 1

Date: Mar. 7th, 2016 06:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silverflight8.livejournal.com
I think I happened to be in the right age bracket - I think I read one abridged out of the Long Winter sometime in grade 2-3 (interestingly, I was living in North Dakota at the time, so relevant :P)

I think so, yeah! Though personally the American Girls passed me by. I read a lot of Dear Canada books which I think are sort of similar - young girls in important or interesting historical periods?
Depth: 2

Date: Mar. 8th, 2016 08:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gothrockrulz.livejournal.com
Ohhh, that's fantastic to have read the Little House book set in the same state you were living in. :D I think Dear Canada sounds to be basically the same thing as American Girls. :) I should have my sister read those as well!
Depth: 3

Date: Mar. 14th, 2016 12:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silverflight8.livejournal.com
It was pretty cool! Did you have any favourite American Girls books/eras they lived in?
Depth: 4

Date: Mar. 14th, 2016 03:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gothrockrulz.livejournal.com
My two favorite series were the Felicity books set in the Revolutionary War and the Josefina books set in (I think) the 1840's/1850's in New Mexico. Which were your favorite of the Dear Canada books?
Depth: 5

Date: Mar. 23rd, 2016 02:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silverflight8.livejournal.com
Oh those are interesting times! The NM ones must have been interesting because of where you lived, I bet :D

I have a most memorable Dear Canada book--it was about the filles de roi, the young women who immigrated to Canada (sponsored by the king of France) to become wives to the overwhelmingly male-dominated Canada at the time. (They were trying to promote growth etc in the new colony). Anyway she gets married and they live on an island I think, in the wilderness, and then her husband suddenly DIES after eating a poisonous mushroom, and she's pregnant, and she survives the winter by herself and also has to give birth by herself. So that one really stuck in my head.
Depth: 6

Date: Mar. 23rd, 2016 04:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gothrockrulz.livejournal.com
Oh, definitely, I did feel more of a kinship to Josefina because so much of her culture is rooted in NM and AZ. Made me wonder if a girl lived a similar life on the same soil I grew up on, 200 years ago. :)

Anyway she gets married and they live on an island I think, in the wilderness, and then her husband suddenly DIES after eating a poisonous mushroom, and she's pregnant, and she survives the winter by herself and also has to give birth by herself. So that one really stuck in my head.

Oh, that is an incredible story, alright. Such spirit and gumption! Can you imagine basically being a mail-order bride? I just, my mind sputters at traveling so far to marry a guy I've never met.

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