I have fairly raced my way through these, since they’re quick and easy to read. This is the final book in this particular series, as the authors have stuck to the seven book phenomenon, which seems to be everywhere (Harry Potter, Narnia etc).
The final book finds Caroline at 17-18, with her first job at her own school, teaching previous classmates and having problems when the “big boys” come to school in the winter, after helping with the planting and harvesting. Sound familiar?
I found a great deal of similarities between this and These Happy Golden Years and the author has borrowed quite a lot from that book. What Caroline experiences with teaching is funnily enough, pretty much the same as what Laura experiences with her first teaching job. Although she doesn’t give it up for love, quite like Caroline does.
Of course, this is the pinnacle of Charles and Caroline’s relationship, but it also has the old way of boy meets girl, boy leaves girl after silly argument, boy comes back and proposes. Hmmmm, a very half hearted proposal I have to say from Charles. It was interesting to find out that they stayed in Concord for a while after marrying, and that Laura would be born in The Little House In The Big Woods - not my favourite book, as far as I can remember.
The blurb/cover is clearly there to reel you in, as the romance takes forever to build up and the majority of the book is dedicated to Caroline teaching. I also heartily disagree with the blurb stating that this brings the story right up to where Little House began - technically, it doesn’t. Unless you want to include the epilogue, which is more like an author’s note, and not quite like part of the story at all. It would have been better to have flash forwarded in time, to perhaps Caroline giving birth to Mary or Laura but it doesn’t. For me, the book ends with the couple in a little patch of clearing in the Big Woods, therefore, no Laura.
I was glad to see that the author’s note at the beginning had not been lifted directly from the previous books, and was instead a simple dedication. The author’s note that originally started in Maria D Wilkes’ books, was getting pretty tiresome to see at the beginning of each book, especially considering the author changes five books in!
My overall thoughts about this series is that it sticks to the formula that Laura started out with, all those years ago. Happy families, suffering through trying times, but always coming out on top. Was it a mistake to stick so closely to that formula and style of writing? Yes. There wasn’t enough story to spread over seven books and could have easily been condensed into four. Would this introduce new readers to the Little House phenomenon? Possibly. I think I will carry on to read the Rose series (at a later date) but I don’t think I will read any further back, to the Martha or Charlotte years. Caroline, Laura and Rose are the ones I grew up with, reading the original Little House books, so I will stick with them.
As a final point, I would recommend these, but I think the prices are utterly ridiculous. They vary in price completely, with the first book, being a completely different cover/format to the rest of the books, and ultimately being cheaper. The rest, I’ve had to grin and bear it, to try and get some of these books. I would recommend shopping around though, as some of the prices listed are nonsense.