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You can share their worlds - their friends and families, their struggles and successes, their sad times and celebrations, their secrets and adventures. You'll see that some things about growing up have changed, while others - like families, friendships, and feelings - haven't changed at all. These are the important things that American girls will always share. They come alive for you in the American Girls Collection.
62 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 1986
Winter is nearly here and Kirsten is feeling anxious. There's so much to do to prepare for winter on Uncle Olav's farm that everyone is always working.
"Papa often stroked his beard and pointed to the geese flying south.
'A very hard winter's on the way,' he said."
Kirsten knows this is true...but the trunk has all of the family's winter clothes along with precious keepsakes, like her mother's candlesticks, her brother's whistle, and Kirsten's most treasured item: a little doll named Sari.
"People are more important than things."
Kirsten and her cousins soon come up with a plan to at least keep some of the Swedish traditions alive...but it requires the family's trunks. And no matter how much Kirsten begs, she can't convince her papa to travel the ten miles to Maryville.
"She'd hoped this first Christmas in America would be just like Christmas in Sweden. How could it, if they didn't have Saint Lucia's Day?"
How can Kirsten convince her papa that she needs those trunks? And what would happen to the family traditions if she can't get them?
"Now Papa scowled. 'Don't ask me again or I'll be angry.' "