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Little House: The Charlotte Years #1

Little House by Boston Bay

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Charlotte Years නමින් ඔබ අතට පත් වන්නේ ලොව පුරා අතිශයින් ජනාදරයට ලක් වූ Little House on the Prairie රූපවාහිනී නාට්‍ය මාලාවට පාදක වුණු Little House පොත් පෙළ ලියූ ලෝරා ඉංගල්ස් වයිල්ඩර්ගේ මිත්තණියගේ කතාවයි. මෙය, කොටස් හතරකින් ලියැවුණු එම කතා මාලාවේ පළමුවැන්නයි.

19 වැනි සියවසේ මුල් භාගයේ, ලෝරාගේ අත්තම්මා වූ චාලට් ටකර් සහ ඇගේ පවුල වෙරළබඩ නගරයක් අසල පිහිටි කුඩා නිවහනක ජීවත් වෙමින් ජීවිතයේ අභියෝගවලට මුහුණ දෙන අන්දමත්, ඔවුන්ගේ සංස්කෘතිය සහ සමාජ සම්බන්ධතා මෙන්ම ඉතිහාසයත් මේ කෘතියෙන් දිග හැරේ. චාම් නිවෙසක, ඔවුන් ගෙවන ඉතා ප්‍රීතිමත්, සුන්දර සැනසිලිදායක ජීවිතය පිළිබඳ කතාව යොවුන් මෙන් ම වැඩිහිටි පාඨකයන්ට ද එක සේ රස විඳිය හැකිය.

160 pages, Paperback

First published April 1, 1999

15 people are currently reading
3549 people want to read

About the author

Melissa Wiley

29 books377 followers
Melissa Wiley is the author of The Nerviest Girl in the World, The Prairie Thief, Fox and Crow Are Not Friends, the Inch and Roly series, the Martha and Charlotte Little House books, and other books for kids. Melissa has been blogging about her family’s reading life and tidal homeschooling adventures at Here in the Bonny Glen since 2005. She is @melissawiley on Twitter and @melissawileybooks on Instagram.

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5 stars
1,112 (38%)
4 stars
827 (28%)
3 stars
730 (25%)
2 stars
147 (5%)
1 star
61 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 76 reviews
Profile Image for Alyssa Nelson.
518 reviews155 followers
March 24, 2020
I loved this. Reading any of the Little House books has such nostalgia for me, and I’m glad people have expanded it to include the women that came before Laura Ingalls. Though much of this had to be pieced together through research and it doesn’t accurately reflect who Charlotte may have been as a person, it’s interesting to see how someone might have lived in the early 1800s in Boston. I especially liked how it isn’t sugarcoated to be without conflict; the War of 1812 is a hot topic with Charlotte’s family and is actively talked about.

Overall, I found this book to be a nice, quick read that was in keeping with the other Little House books. Charlotte has such a curious and adventurous spirit — she’s a joy to read about, and I’m sure that children will appreciate her imagination (I certainly would have devoured this book as a child!). The incorporation of little history facts is also well done; the book details how to make certain foods and how a brick oven was used at this time. I love when good stories can also be educational. Anyone with an interest in history will find this story fascinating for that reason.

Definitely pick this up if you have a little one around in need of a good book! Laura Ingalls and historical fiction fans will especially enjoy this one.

Also posted on Purple People Readers.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
2,776 reviews35 followers
April 12, 2011
I didn't like this one as much as I've been liking the Martha books set in Scotland, but I think that's just because I love Scotland so much. This book is really well structured, and I love how she takes little things, like a molasses jug, and uses it to link both the beginning and end of the story, and also to show how the little girl's life has changed in the meantime. Well and subtly done. I was also fascinated by how brick ovens were actually used--all the details of period life are, as usual, well done and interesting. I could have done with a bit more about the school and Charlotte's lessons and activities there, but there's a limit to what you can fit in a book for elementary school kids if you want to cover six whole months!
2 reviews
October 26, 2011
Little House by Boston Bay
Author Maria D Wilkes
By Michelle King p2 English


The book I read is called little house by Boston Bay, the content in this book is it’s about a pioneer family living in Boston close to wartime. Some ideas in this book are how they deal with the British dealing with Boston; the time is this book is not in the Revolutionary war. It’s in the time around the war of 1812.

The book was organized very well. The author of this book didn’t make any mistakes with the organization and that was really nice. I also like how it didn’t have any random parts to it.

The person who wrote this book experienced all this, but when she wrote this book. She wrote it as like felt a little bit like a secondary source. Of course thought, it is not. I enjoy how the book is about a person experiencing the whole thing. It really made the book better, and it gave you details on how a pioneer life was like.

The word choice in the book was very good cause it described the timing very well with the word choice. It was very proper with a little bit of western. For example, I saw the word lass. You don’t hear that word a lot anymore. It was nice how it made the book really unique in a special way.

The fluency in this book, just like how all the other little house books are. It’s very simple with a little touch of western. That is mainly how they talked in those times.

The conventions in this book are very simple. It is a lot different that what we do today. They grew their own food, and they didn’t have any heater or air conditioning. I am happy I read this book and it was really fun to read.
Profile Image for Twyla.
1,766 reviews61 followers
January 30, 2018
My favorite part was when Charlotte made friends with Susan, and actually started to enjoy school. My least favorite part was when Charlotte tried to walk all the way to Scotland and back again before night.
Profile Image for Audrey.
36 reviews
November 5, 2025
Was always curious about the Little House spinoffs, but could never find copies as a kid. Found this at a used bookstore and read in a day. The nostalgia was very cozy and comforting!
Profile Image for Jaime K.
Author 1 book44 followers
July 31, 2017
If I was younger, I'd give this 5 stars, but the simplistic language distracted me.
Still, the chapters are long and rich. And, this book holds one of my favourite chapters in the entire LH series.

Roxbury, a suburb outside of Boston, 1814
The United States is still young and the children of immigrants are first generation Americans - not so far off from their second gen friends.
There is history that I've forgotten about and typically don't care for, but Little House books always whet my appetite in that regard. It's tough for me to imagine some things though, given the time. I keep seeing movie images, which may not be realistic.

Charlotte Tucker is about 5 years old at this time, and she certainly has a child's imagination. The molasses jug, cider vinegar cruet, and butter dish are her Saturday family (respectively the father, mother, and baby).
Her age makes her thoughts and errors more adorable and "forgivable" (for lack of a better word).

If a Little House reader didn't already know, this shows that Martha did marry Lewis Tucker. They moved to the U.S. 15 years prior (so 1799). As a person living in 2017, even knowing that this really wasn't all that long ago, the fact that we're now in a 3rd century following the year is a bit mind boggling.

Charlotte has two older brothers (Lewis & Tom), an older sister (Lydia), and a baby sister (Mary). At this time, the family is experiencing first-hand the issues of war as there is a British blockade preventing "everyday" things like molasses from coming into the States. Although she is young, Charlotte realizes for the first time the enormity of the world and how strangers' decisions affect her life.

The reader gets a good sense of what life was like living in a large town outside of a larger city (Charlotte thinks of Boston as a 'grown up Roxbury').
- Lew continues blacksmithing in Roxbury and the Tuckers have a weekday boarder named Will.
- I find it a little odd that although they attend a church service each Sunday, they call it "meeting." I forgot that church pews used to be purchased by families!
- As an adult, I recognize that Charlotte and her siblings have immigrant parents, yet they're one couple of many who have come over to this new country. Compared to now, I wonder how difficult that truly was, and how they were really treated. Also, did they REALLY speak English? If not, how did that affect everything? It does say that Lew was speaking Gaelic, but that doesn't mean he didn't know English.
- Having a garden, even while not living on a farm, was extremely important.
- Students in schools had different books and the teacher taught from each one's book to whoever had it. Charlotte thinks that one book is likely not as good as hers; I'm wont to agree that some books would be a lot worse than others.

The accuracy of almanacs always awes me, especially because predictions are made a year in advance. It's no wonder people relied so heavily on them - and it makes me wonder why we're so wrong in such predictions these days.

I feel so bad for the teacher who had to deal with a two-year-old simply because the mother didn't want him (or her I'm sure in other cases) to be underfoot.

Martha's Scottish song of Henry and Caroline made me laugh.

I'm surprised that despite the small houses and all that kids even then knew little of where baies came from.

"In the Smithy" is my favorite chapter not only of this book but likely of all the Little House books. There is information on horseshoes which is interesting, but the best thing is that it has all but the third verse (Google search tells me there are 4) of 'Defense of Fort McHenry.' I've never seen all the verses anywhere else, not even in my U.S. History course, which was around the time I first read this.
Profile Image for Jenly.
333 reviews
August 23, 2021
I think probably both the Martha series (when I get to it) and the Charlotte series are going to be solid three stars, since I can't quite get passed that fact that we have basically no information about what life was like for either of these two ladies. Wiley does bring a charm similar to Laura's to the story, though.
Profile Image for Thilini  Kasthuri.
49 reviews1 follower
December 15, 2025
1840 දශකයේ බොස්ටන් රොක්ස්බරි නගරයේ ජීවත් වූ, ලෝක ප්‍රසිද්ධ “ලිට්ල් හවුස්” කතා මාලාවේ ලෝරාගේ අත්තම්මා චාලට්ගේ ළමා කාලය විස්තර කරන මේ කෘතිය, චාලට් කතා මාලාවේ පළමු පොත ලෙස කියවන්නන්ගේ හදවත් දිනා ගත් කෘතියකි. අවුරුදු හතරක් හෝ පහක කුඩා දැරියක් වූ චාලට්ගේ ඇස් හරහා දිග හැරෙන මේ කතාවේ සුවිශේෂත්වය වන්නේ එහි ඇති අව්‍යාජත්වය සහ සරලත්වයයි.

ඇමරිකාව සහ මහා බ්‍රිතාන්‍යය අතර 1812 කාළයේ සිදු වූ යුද්ධය නිසා සාමාන්‍ය ජන ජීවිතයට එල්ල වූ බලපෑම මෙලිස්සා විලී විසින් හරිම සංවේදී ලෙස විස්තර කර තිබෙනවා. යුද්ධය යන්න පිළිබඳ කිසිදු සංකල්පමය අදහසක් නොමැති කුඩා චාලට්ට එම සංකීර්ණ කාල පරිච්ඡේදය තුළ දැනුණු සතුට, විරහව, බිය සහ අපේක්ෂාව අතර මැදින් ගමන් ගත් කාළය ගැන තමා මේ කතාව පුරාවට ගලා යන්නේ. පිටු 144ක් පුරාවට විහිදෙන මේ කතාව, ඓතිහාසික සිද්ධීන් ගැන විතරක් නොවේ චාලට්ගේ දෑසින් දරුවෙකු ලෙස ඒවා දකින ආකාරය හරීම අපූරු ලෙස ඉදිරිපත් කරලා තියෙනවා.

මෙහි සෑම පිටුවක් පාසාම ලෝරාගේ කතා මාලාවේ හුරු පුරුදු නැවුම් ශෛලිය විහිදී තිබෙනවා. නාගරීක පසුබිමක් තුළ විදහා දක්වන චාලට්ගේ ගමන් මඟ, ග්‍රාමීය පසුබිමක තුළ දිග හැරුණු ලෝරාගේ කතාවට වඩා වෙනස් වුවත්, එම විවිධත්වය තුළම අලුත් රසයක් ගෙන එනවා.

අවුරුදු විස්සක්, විසි තුනකට පෙර මුල්වරට ලෝරාගේ කතාව කියවීමේදී දැනුණු ඒ රසයම අඩුවක් නැතිව තවමත් නැවුම්ව පවතින මේ කෘතිය, වයස හෝ පරම්පරා බේදයකින් තොරව සියලු පොත් රසිකයන්ට වැළඳ ගත හැකි සුන්දර කෘතියකි.

ඒ වාගේම කත්‍යානා අමරසිංහ මහත්මියගේ මෙම පරිවර්තනය මගින් මුල් කෘතියේ රසය සහ හැඟීම සිංහල කියවන්නන්ට ලබා දීමට හැකිව තිබීම විශේෂයෙන් අගය කළ යුතුයි. විජේ���ූරිය ග්‍රන්ත කේන්ද්‍රයේ ප්‍රකාශනයක් ලෙස සිංහල සාහිත්‍ය ලෝකයට එකතු වූ මේ කෘතිය ඉතිහාසය සහ මිනිස් සංවේදීතාවය අතර සුන්දර සම්මිශ්‍රණයකි.

කෘතිය : වෙරළබඩ නගරයේ කුඩා නිවහන
කතෲ : මෙලිස්සා විලී
පරිවර්තනය : කත්‍යානා අමරසිංහ
ප්‍රකාශනය : විජේසූරිය ග්‍රන්ත kendraya
Profile Image for Jenn.
79 reviews
November 16, 2020
Little House by Boston Bay provides insight into the life of Laura’s grandmother, Charlotte Tucker. After reading about Charlotte as a mother in the Caroline Years series, it is very interesting to get a glimpse of her childhood and life during the War of 1812. As a Canadian, my knowledge of American history is poor so I have learned some interesting historical facts from reading this book Although by the same author, I find this book a little more dry than the books in the Caroline Years. I think Caroline’s family inherently had more interesting characters. I laughed quite hard at the part in which Charlotte attempted to walk to Scotland and see the fairies and when Charlotte and her new friend Susan thought that they would be able to ride in a coach when they learned their ABCs. It was also hilarious when Charlotte’s mother Martha added way too much cayenne pepper to the pounded cheese and proceeded to bury the remainder in the yard. Martha then danced a jig upon the buried pounded cheese to pack the soil on top and prevent it from spoiling the garden. The whole family danced together and sang in the darkness after, a wonderful memory for all. I very much wish to have an apple-paring party after reading of them in this book - they seem like such fun! Charlotte was deeply saddened when Will, the blacksmith apprentice of Lewis, joined the Roxbury militia to fight the British in the north.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Michelle.
606 reviews24 followers
April 14, 2023
After the truncated final book of the Martha book, I fear I’m in a similar predicament with this series - once again, they will no doubt stop abruptly after book 4.

The first book of this series is now following Charlotte “Lottie” Tucker, daughter of Martha and Lewis Tucker, who we met in the earlier series. She will end up being mother to Caroline/grandmother to Laura.

There’s no real backstory to this and we don’t find out what prompted Martha/Lewis to move to the US, we just find out how long it took them and that they travelled separately. Perhaps it will be mentioned in later books.

Charlotte is just starting school in this, so she’s 5 years old and it’s a very simplistic first book. That’s what I’ve found with these, for some reason the first books have always been abridged, so they’re considerably shorter than the remainder of the series. She’s got her brothers and sisters around her (including a sister called Lydia, obviously Martha remembering her governess). Martha in this book comes across more strict than the wild child we knew from the earlier series, even though the reader can see one of her daughters is going to be the same!

Charlotte is also being affected by the 1812 war and the British blockading Boston Bay, although she’s not aware of too much - a lack of molasses!

A good introduction to the series, I just fear more disappointment is in my future.
Profile Image for Jenna.
1,684 reviews92 followers
June 24, 2023
I've been making my way through the Little House Legacy books and I've only got one book left to read. This last collection features Laura's grandmother Charlotte who grew up around Boston near the Revolutionary War. This ranks my least favorite in the entire series mostly because I don't feel strong connection to Charlotte. I was honestly more invested in her Scottish mother Martha from Little House in the Highlands. I'm a sucker for a Scottish brogue and I loved how it was incorporated into the dialogue. Charlotte didn't stand out too much other than being an obedient daughter and her fondness for sewing foreshadowed her future career as seamstress. I'm not looking forward to the next installment because I don't have any other books to read. These books are out of publication and difficult to source without paying some serious coinage. I'm glad I found a teacher's old collection from Goodwill so long ago and giving them the love they deserve. Little House means everything to me, from Martha Morse all the way down to Rose Wilder.

#gif from chaptertwo-thepacnw
Profile Image for Kelly.
614 reviews2 followers
May 13, 2020
Book Review

Title: Little House by Boston Bay

Author: Melissa Wiley

Genre: Historical Fiction

Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Review: We love reading these books! Reading any Little House books are full of nostalgia for me as my Grandma read and collected all things Little House for me and now I am reading them to my son. I loved hearing Charlottes perception of the war and it made me think of how my son is perceiving the world and pandemic going on now. I couldn’t help but break out a Scottish accent whenever Martha (Charlottes mom) talks which my son kept asking me why I was talking like that. Overall a great read for any read aloud family.

Synopsis: It's 1814 and Charlotte lives just outside the city of Boston. She always has something to look forward to—tending Mama's garden, visiting Papa's blacksmith shop, and embarking on her very own Scottish adventure!

This book in 3 emojis:
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385 reviews
January 16, 2019
I heard about this series on the Read Aloud Revival podcast. I had no idea that it existed. I really enjoyed it! It is significantly shorter than the original Little House series. It is also faster paced. That being said, the mother in the story does sometimes use words that are in a Scottish dialect that could be hard for very young readers to understand. My 11 year old finished all the Little House books years ago, and started reading this series also. She enjoyed it, and has encouraged her younger siblings to read them. I would say that these books are great to read aloud (to help with the dialect in some areas) or for strong readers aged 5 and up.
This series is about Charlotte who is Laura's grandmother. Charlotte is 5 in this book and it is during the time of the War of 1812. There is talk of the war, but it does come from a 5 year old's perspective, so it is not scary.
Profile Image for Dominique.
748 reviews2 followers
December 12, 2021
If you really think about it, the premise for the spinoff series for 'Little House on the Prarie' is so wild. A middle-grade historical fiction series whose focus is on the maternal line of Laura Ingalls Wilder is an interesting (but strange) idea. The Charlotte Years is an example of how shaky this idea can be. There isn't much plot but a series of moments as seen through the eyes of a 5-year-old Charlotte. It's cute but it feels like filler. It feels like a setup for something more interesting later in the series. But considering that this series is only four books, I highly doubt this series moves beyond cute moments and into serious character development and growth.
Profile Image for Bekah Forbes.
116 reviews
March 26, 2025
Starting Charlotte’s series was a little jarring with the time jump from the end of Martha’s as we miss so much information about how Martha and Lew Tucker got together and ended up in the states. Charlotte is so young in this one that she doesn’t realize Scotland is a different country, let alone have any insight into how her parents lived before she was born. It was interesting to see a 5 year old’s perspective on a blockade and a war, reminding me of how little I knew of what was actually going on with 9/11 as I was just a little older at that time. It will be fun to see how much Charlotte learns and changes across the series.
Profile Image for Emily.
852 reviews5 followers
June 13, 2017
The story was cute but as an adult I enjoyed learning about the war of 1812. And colonial life during that time. We didn't learn much about that war in school and it's funny I've also recently read the Caroline American girl books and those take place during the war of 1812 as well. I also enjoyed reading about Martha as an adult too when I recently read her stories as a child.
Profile Image for Kate H.
1,684 reviews1 follower
August 20, 2019
None of the other "Little House Years" books are as good as the ones about Laura but other then the Laura books I prefer the Martha books but the Charlotte books are a close third for me. I am from the Boston area so I enjoy reading about this region of the world plus the descriptions are excellent.
99 reviews1 follower
January 30, 2023
A nice book with Charlotte tucker almost as spirited as Laura ingalls. I love the martha years as well. I wish someone would write about Martha and Lew tuckers romance. It would make awesome story of a nobleman's daughter and a blacksmith falling in love,the disapproval of her family , the wedding , going off to America, and Martha adjusting to the life of a middle class life style.
Profile Image for Sydney.
250 reviews3 followers
June 14, 2024
Its hard to believe Martha already grew up and settled down. Charlotte is so much like Martha when she was a little girl. This book was a great introduction to the "The Charlotte Years" and I can't wait to read the rest of the series. I would recommend this to anyone who enjoyed "The Martha Years" and the rest of the Little House series.
Profile Image for Hannah (Fully Booked Penguin).
110 reviews
August 29, 2025
This was a light fun read.
It was nice to be introduced to the new era, though I'm still sad we missed the immigration of Martha and Lew.
As a non-American the history was interesting, and I think it's a nice way for middle-graders to learn a bit of history.
Wasn't sure about the poem inserts, but perhaps the youth are more poetic lovers than I am. 🤣
Profile Image for Lindsay Bray.
514 reviews
July 30, 2018
This was a great look into Laura’s family history. Although I really enjoyed it, it was quite short and I wished that the plot had a little more to offer. The characters were very likeable and the writing style transported me into the story. Great addition to the Little House series!
Profile Image for Savani.
615 reviews37 followers
January 7, 2024
Apparently I read this when I was younger, but I don’t recall anything. A bit boring yet informative regarding America’s independence. I felt like the war took too much from the book, but it probably was like that back then.
Profile Image for Dawn.
444 reviews2 followers
May 26, 2017
My eight year old daughter and I are having a delightful time reading about Laura's ancestors. While nothing is quite like the original Little House series, these are a wonderful read.
Profile Image for Kristen Luppino.
692 reviews3 followers
August 9, 2017
I enjoyed this more than some of three other first books in these series. Set in Boston besser the end of the war of 1812. Excited to read the next.
123 reviews1 follower
January 25, 2018
I think this is the one where her brother gets his arm or his finger amputated! This book was deeply fascinating to me. That part was so exciting!
Profile Image for Kirsten.
2,473 reviews37 followers
April 8, 2018
I keep coming back to these when I'm in search of some young fluff. This has some great historical details, and takes place in a place I've been to (Roxbury), which just makes it more fun.
294 reviews
September 2, 2018
It was nice to read of Martha’s life as a wife and mother. Charlotte reminds me a lot of Martha as a child.
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