I still have so much to learn.... On first read-through, there were some points in the text that didn't sit right: the Asian boy was called Chuck because no one could pronounce his name? The Hmong people were like Vietnamese but not the same? Ma hates hates hates Indians? I cringed as I read through the chapters. Towards the end, I felt the author started to swing back towards a better historical story but was it enough???
I re-read the book recently....there were pieces I loved and pieces I hated. I loved that students could relate to so much of Charlotte's life--mom's moving from relationship to relationship and home to home, lack on money, single parents, etc. So much good! And I hated even more the pieces that were making me cringe.
I'm including this IMPORTANT REVIEW here as I'm not nearly knowledgeable enough to speak to this topic:
American Indians in Childrens Lit
Although I love pieces of this book, it won't be on my order list.
grade: D
audience: middle school, middle grade, junior high, please use caution and respect if using this book; what may seem harmless to you could be very damaging to a non-Caucasian reader
Quotes/Author:
"a land so quiet and empty the wind had nothing to blow" 5
"the land was so flat a ball wouldn't roll without a hard kick" 4
"the town was so small it reminded me of a little porcelain Christmas village." 13
"I live a stone's throw from Walnut Grove. You'll like it. It's a nice little town. People are friendly but not too friendly, if you know what I mean. " 9
"...we were little, Mom would take her guitar to the beach in Tampa. She's play and we'd sing, and tourists would drop money in her guitar case. then we'd use the money for gas." 18
"Our Twin Superpowers seemed intact. But something was different." 20
"And our dad might be a train wreck, or maybe he's not. We don't know." "I guess." All Mom told us about our dad is they met in Boston, and he broke her heart. We don't remember anything about him. She's day, "He's not the man I thought he was." 22
"....Rose's dad, Reydel "Rey" Mendoza. He also was not the man she thought he was. Nor were any of her other boyfriends." 22
"Walnut Grove was so small people had to go to Iowa to find a waterslide." 26
"The harvest is a metaphor for growth. Do you think it's too quiet?" "Is quiet another word for boring?" Julia asked.
"So if you don't want to get bullied, avoid eye contact. If you don't want to get dumped, avoid eye contact." 34
"Once a boy asked Freddy if he could hear the sound of being punched; then he punched Freddy in the stomach." 44
"Boys bully with their fists. Girls bully with their words." 44
"And Ma, who is the sweetest character in the book, hates Indians, and I mean hates hates hates them. Maybe it was because the Ingallses built their cabin on Indian land, and the Indians weren't too happy about it. In the end, both the Indians and the Ingallses pack up their stuff and move. The Indians are forced to leave their hunting lands, and the Ingallses end up on the banks of Plum Creek near Walnut Grove, because all Pa want to do is move." 46 when I first read this, I had red flags flying, so much wrong with this, works itself out in the end
"....girls couldn't stick up for boys. it made the boy look weak, and bullies could smell weakness." 53
"Freddy had not only talked to those boys; he'd accepted an invitation to go to a football game. " 54
"Laura Ingalls Essay By Charlotte Lake LAURA INGALLS IS RUINING MY LIFE!!!!!!" 55
"I've heard Minnesota is worse. It's possible to die in cold weather." 64
"Mrs. Newman was using her I-care-about-you smile and her I-don't-care-about-you eyes." 66
"I was just telling Rose about her dad getting married and how happy I am for him and how having a stepmother will be a beautiful experience. Now she'll have two moms who love her." 66
"had an Asian name--something like Chue--and everyone called him Chuck." 70 talking about nicknames for kids - but students calling an Asian boy Chuck because they can't pronounce his name-- NOT ok - would like to see a better model of how to address a student name when you don't know how to pronounce their name - dissappointing
"It's living history. I really need this. just close your eyes and listen to the crickets and the frogs. These are the exact same sounds Laura heard 150 years ago." 72 mom is feeling inspiration from the spirit of Laura and her experiences
"If you've heard people say something is as boring as watching paint dry, well, the Manifest Destiny essay would bore the paint." 79
"The decisions we make have consequences; some of those consequences are intended and some are not intended." 81
"Winter had come to Walnut Grove like a toddler having a tantrum" 91
"People kept moving west to get free land, and nobody really thought much about things like who could put up fences and who could block the way to rivers and lakes. The government didn't' plan for conflict between farmers who wanted to plant crops and ranchers who wanted the land for the cattle." 97
"Homesteading laws brought a wave of pioneers eager to own land in the West and make their fortune. They left the relative comfort of the East and discovered they were unprepared for the harsh life and isolation. Settlers spread out, making it difficult to socialize. News of the outside world came sporadically. Visiting family back East was a near impossibility. Medical care was scarce, and sick children often died. Settlers worked dawn to dusk and lived in a constant state of exhaustion. Sometimes they went hungry. They were unprepared for weather--heat and storms in summer; blizzards in the winter. The howling prairie winds drove people mad. Violence, alcoholism, and suicide..." 97
"...the howling prairie winds hadn't exactly driven her to alcohol or violence or suicide. She'd been driven to sighing and napping and not washing her hair" 98
"they weren't always honest about the type of land. So people ended up moving to desolate places that weren't' good for farming, like parts of Oklahoma and Texas. The government got people to grow wheat on soil that was best used for buffalo grazing. So those people farmed and farmed, and when a big drought hit, the buffalo grasses were gone--grasses that would have held the dirt in place. When the winds came in the 1930s, they churned dirt into storms that looked like black tidal waves sweeping across the land. People died from pneumonia because of dust in their lungs. Animals died. Crops died. Houses were practically buried in dirt. The sky refused to rain.
"Without saying anything, I sat down on the floor next to Rose. And just like that, I was part of the circle. " 106
"Dakota Sioux Conflict because it was essentially a war that happened right here in southwestern Minnesota. The whole thing was overshadowed by the Civil War, so most people know very little about it. You'll make some connections between it and the Ingalls family." "Like Ma hating Indians?" "In a way," she said. "No doubt she'd heard about Indians killing settlers in southwestern Minnesota, and she was afraid." "It's not like she could call 911." "Indians were afraid of the settlers, too. The government broke treaty after treaty. They didn't give the Indians supplies that were promised, and then Indians were afraid they'd starve that winter." 114
"Laura Ingalls did an injustice when she wrote On the Banks of Plum Creek because she never named the town. You will not find the words Walnut Grove anywhere in that book. In the television show, yes. The book? No."
"Apparently Laura hadn't considered unintended consequences of not naming the town--museum ladies 150 years later would hold a grudge." 118
"I came up with a new observation: if you don't have clever stories or jokes, then ask questions." 127
"The Hmong moved to Minnesota. The Hmong mostly lived in Saint Paul, but the old people worried about the crime in the city and whether their kids would get in trouble, and they wanted to live in a small town where things are safe and clean and good for families. I heard that someone's kid was a fan of Little House on the Prairie, so she said, 'How about Walnut Grove?' And some of them moved here and sent word to their friends and families that it was a good place. More and more moved here, and now the town is twenty-five percent hmong. Maybe even more. That's a bigger percentage of Asian people than in most big cities." 133
another girl in the class wrote: "She wrote that we should have a museum for Native Americans because they lived around here first, and they had these battles with settlers. She said the early farmers shouldn't be called settlers because the land was already settled. They were more like invaders." 134
"She changed the timeline and left out lots of things that weren't appropriate for kids to read...like witnessing alcoholism and violence--prairie madness" 138
"Negative words breed negative thinking, and negative thinking creates an atmosphere of sadness and despair." 139
Charlotte, "I think it's better to not have a dad than to have one and watch him turn into a jerk. I just assume my dad is a jerk. Then I don't miss him." 150
Charlotte, "I think people show their bad sides most of the time . If you're a good person, you have to be careful or you'll get crushed." 150
Julia, "I realized I'd rather have two amazing friends than a bunch of people who just follow me around because I have expensive clothes and cute hair and the fanciest house in town." 151
"In the winter, the regular temperature could kill you. The regular temperature plus a wind chill could kill you faster." 153
"When Mom and I stepped onto the driveway, I inhaled and got an instant case of brain freeze, like I'd stuffed ice cubes in my nose. Every breath felt like a knife stabbing my head and then my chest Even my eyeballs hurt." 156
"this is the first place where you and I really hang out. Freddy has his own thing. But here you and I can be a team" 163
"you could die from icicle injuries" 171
"Cold enough for ya?" 171
"Minnesotans think everybody else has an accent. They don't even notice how they say Minnah-soooootah." 171
"Kids like Chad grow up in a negative environment, and that's what they project in the world." 182
"We have a deal. He lets me know news first so I'm prepared to help Rose. What is going on with him? It's like he's so caught up in this woman he's forgetting his daughter." 197
"Try to think of it this way: you and Freddy aren't growing apart, you're just growing up. you and Freddy were so close that it kept you from interacting with the world. " good for any relationship 197
"Westward expansion stunk if you were Native American" 208
"Charlotte, don't think for a second that she forgot you. Because, my dear, you are unforgettable." 210
Mrs. Newman says, "We also need to let Charlotte know that it's a lie to say you committed a crime just because adults are pressuring you to do so."
Mrs. Newman said, "I want you to know there are people in your corner." 225
police have a copy of Charlotte's I hate Laura essay and that makes her look more suspect
"Children, this business of group work means on thing: a couple of good kids do all the work, and the rest of the lazy ninnyhammers do nothing. If we're going to break into teams, we'll drill with math flashcards." then she asks the Asian boy where the flashcards are kept?????? ACK!
"It's a crime to vandalize a building, but it's a much worse crime to falsely accuse someone of a crime or to lie to police."235
"Who cared about Bad Chad? He was rotten to the core. He smoked. He tormented kids. He hurt Freddy. he stuck my mom with a bill she couldn't afford to pay. Even if Bad Chad didn't do it--and obviously he did--everyone knew he'd eventually be a professional criminal. Somewhere there was a jail cell with his name on it." 238
Charlotte, "I'd been the same invisible version of myself in every place I've ever lived." 240
"I'd assumed the worst. Again. A big, fat, epic mistake." 245
mom again with a winning comment "Lying is not okay, but you did it out of fear, not malice. That's an important distinction. " 250
"She made a choice. She could've kept her nose out of it, but she defended a kid. And defending a kid is a pretty good choice. " 253
so typical Minnesotan, "we'll have at least eight inches on the ground by morning. Temperatures will drop to five degrees, but it'll feel like minus twenty with the wind chill. Expect gusts of wind up to thirty miles an hour. We'll report school closings as they come in." 254
Rose, "Laura Ingalls doesn't love us! She won't connect with Mom. Laura's energy is angry because Mom is writing about Mars instead of the prairie. if that book doesn't start writing itself, we'll have to leave. Freddy will lose all those friends, and he'll hog you all to himself. Just like before. I'll be an only child all over again, only this time Dad won't want me, either." 256
"Someone will call. Mia gave each of us a cookie. 'Any minute.' Minutes passed. An hour passed. The phone didn't ring." 265
Charlotte, "was it possible to be happy and relieved to see her but also feel angry? Worse than angry--furious. It was like sweating in the cold. Nothing in Walnut Grove made sense." 273
Rose, "I read Charlotte's school assignment about the Trail of Tears. The article was about how settling the West destroyed the Indians. They literally had to walk hundreds of miles so the pioneers could have their land. And they got sick and there wasn't enough food. and the weather was terrible, but the government didn't' care and the pioneers didn't care. The Indians had to keep marching, and tons of them died...We have museums all over the United States bragging about how great we are because we built a new country. We have books and movies and songs. But our stories are wrong." 276
Rose, "In the first version of Little house on the Prairie, which came out almost one hundred years ago, Laura described the prairie like this: "There the wild animals wandered and fed as though they were in a pasture that stretched much farther than a man could see, and there were no people. Only Indians lived there." 277
Rose, "She said no people. Only Indians. She basically said Indians aren't people." 277
Rose, "Someone wrote to the publisher, and they changed the word people to settlers for the next printing. Laura felt terrible about it. She didn't mean it the way it came out." 277
Charlotte, "We're...healing. You can't have...um, joy...if you don't sometimes have pain." 279
Freddy, "I don't care about being Mr. Popular. I care about having two or three friends. Or just one friend. " 283
Charlotte has some anger issues, Freddy, "When you're that mad, Charlotte, you're impossible. I thought I'd let it cool down a bit." 285
not enough room to end