The Little House books tell the story of a little pioneer girl and her family as they travled by covered wagon across the Midwest. Laura Ingalls Wilder's classic books, illustrated with Garth Williams' timeless artwork, have been cherished by millions of readers ever since they were first published over sixity years ago.
It’s a fond good-bye to the Big Woods as Laura and her family pack up the covered wagon and begin their journey westward to the prairie in this latest addition to the best-selling My First Little House Books series. Renée Graef’s enchanting full-color illustrations, inspired by Garth Williams’s classic artwork, bring Laura and her family lovingly to life in this seventh title in the My First Little House Books series, picture books adapted from Laura Ingalls Wilder’s beloved storybooks.
Ingalls wrote a series of historical fiction books for children based on her childhood growing up in a pioneer family. She also wrote a regular newspaper column and kept a diary as an adult moving from South Dakota to Missouri, the latter of which has been published as a book.
Wonderful story of a family leaving home to start a new life - beautiful art. Remember this a TV show when I was a little boy; I don't think I appreciated it much back then (not enough gunfights). Now I can appreciate that there were lots of people who risked everything to try to find a new way of life.
*We wrapped up our unit with a reading of this story. Again, it was well liked by my class and very approachable to them in terms of content and connection. We read it while working very hard on first person narratives of a pioneer-inspired character. This story really does the trick in pushing their creative writing further. This is a very good read!
This is incorporated into our reading curriculum during our pioneer unit. This does a fantastic job of telling a short narrative of the anxieties, struggles, and potential successes that pioneers faced in making the westward journey. We teach about the history of this time, but also teach narrative writing at the same time in this unit, so this serves two purposes wonderfully. One of my favorite units in our curriculum currently.
This is the first of many of the My First Little House Books by Laura Ingalls Wilder, adapted for the ages 3 – 8. It very simply depicts the story of Laura and her family preparing to leave the big woods of Wisconsin and travel west in their covered wagon. It has amazingly vivid illustrations that appeal to all ages. What I love best about this book is the way it easily introduces a new way of life to this young age group. The readers can identify with Laura, being a young person herself. This is most likely the first introduction young readers have had to the ways of life during this time period. Covered wagons and petticoats are most likely foreign concepts to them. This book also emphasizes the importance of family. All of the members work together to get ready for the journey west. I just love how my four year old daughter already talks about Ma, Pa, Mary, Carrie, and Laura. I am looking forward to reading the rest of this series with her and my son.
The more I read these books the more I fall in love with them! My 2 year old granddaughter and my two special needs teenage sons even like them! They are simple enough to not loose young readers-listeners BUT not loose the true stories that Laura Wilder wanted to bring out in her stories. And the illustrations are so very good! (Except the fact that in each book they have Laura's eyes as blue and they were brown...but hey, that's just a little fact.) This story talks about the Ingallas family leaving the little house in the woods, and written so well that I had tears in my eyes and my adult daughter told me with her eyes kind of teared up too... "It would have been so sad to live back then and to move...knowing you would probably never see your family again...no grandma, no grandpa, etc." Again written for a young child but moving for us adults...as Little House always has been!
Going West by Laura Ingalls Wilder is an excellent book to read. This book interested me because each page included large text and didn't have many words on each page. The illustrations were amazing because it let the readers know what is happening. Going West is about a little girl and her family traveling by Wagon from Wisconsin to the West. It talks about their journey and how it is different to travel now then it was back then.
The intended audience for this book would be for 3rd or 4th graders. For an elementary classroom you can have the students bring in their grandparents and have their grandparents talk about how they traveled when they were little and how it is different today.
Much to my delight, my boys who are five and two absolutely love these books! The "My First Little House" series takes stories out of the original little house books and illustrates them beautifully. My boys love to point out each family member and my five year old asks lots of questions. These books have become a wonderful way to introduce history and "the simple life" to my little ones. These books have great family values. :)
The Little House on the Prairie series is one of my favorites so I love that they made younger reader versions of the series. I love how they don’t have to read the whole chapter books but still get to understand the story. The illustrations are beautiful and make it seem like you are there right along with Laura. I could see myself reading this to my own classroom some day.
Loved this book. It is the "Little House" books series but for younger readers. Although sometimes the comments made about Native Americans are not politically correct, I think it is still a great point of discussion on how our thinking has changed and we are more careful how we speak of people who are different from us.
We read this after we read A Little Prairie House and I wish we had read it first as it talks about the house in the big woods in Minnesota and getting ready to to move to the Great Plains. It raised some good questions from my daughter about why they moved and how it feels to move away from family.
Notes: All the books in this series are beautiful. Great intro to pioneer life, but may not connect to preschoolers with no frame of reference. Son read them after he first learned to read. Excerpted from Wilder's actual books.
This book is good for grades k-2, 3-4. It gives children a glimpse of what children like Laura had to do when they left there homes and say good bye to families that they might never see again. It's a good book to have in a classroom. The genre is biography.
This is a series that captured my heart years ago. I have never wavered in my love for all things Little House. Laura Ingalls Wilder captured a time in this country that was simpler and charming.
Laura and her family live in the woods in Wisconsin. One night, her father told her mother that he was going to move their family to the west, where there are less people, no trees, and tall, thick grass. So, they gathered their belongings, sold their home, and packed up their wagon. When it was finally time to go, they said their goodbyes and headed west toward their new home on the Western prairie.
This book (and other books in the series) might best be used at the early elementary level. It would be great to use during a pioneer or Westward expansion unit. Additionally, it would be a great mentor text for teaching plot.
This book is will help the children see what Laura had to do when they had to leave their homes and say good bye to people that they will never see again. The illustrations in this book are beautiful and it makes feel like I am right there with Laura in the story.
Genre: Historical Fiction Copy right 1995 I own several Laura Ingalls Wilder books and my students really enjoy them read aloud. I found this one in our school library because I though "going west" would be a good addition to historical fiction as it represents an american family struggling in hard times. I am not sure I would use it as a read aloud ( I currently use a christmas story from LIW in my classroom)but I would definately be sure to have it as a book in my library.
A great segmented series that breaks out smaller stories from the series. This series is a great introduction to the Laura Ingalls Wilder series to move the young reader onto once they are ready.