Customer Reviews
The Best of the collection - By: Mehajabeen Farid, 13 Jan 2008 
In this book, the Ingalls meets some Native Indians, Mr Edwards & Mrs Scott. The whole family catch `Fever n' 'angue' which now is called Malaria. While Pa is out, some Indians come & take tobacco & some food. They do this a second time while Pa is out about a few months after. At the end, Laura & her family leave again searching for a new homein Minnesota. This book is so imaginative that it feels like a fiction where you are experiencing everything. I really enjoyed `The Little Housein the Prairie' & I think this book is really good. I really recommend it to everyone who reads this review. I rate this book 9/ 10.
For young and old - By: Jennifer Fugate, 24 Jan 2007 
These stories are fascinating. When I was little I watched the series on television; loved every single episode, & now that I'm older I enjoy the stories, scenery depictions & sentimentin a whole different way, still remembering the impression the books made on me as a child.
My oldest son is 5 years old, & this book has not only provided hours of entertainment, but also helped him understand history, development & differences between now & the past.
The illustrations are not very vivid, however we are just starting to read these type of books, & the story is fascinating enough that the boys keep up without pictures.
In addition, most childrens' books we have seem to be about boys, & the fact that this story is told by a girl, seems to add to the broadening of my boy's mind.
Little House on the Prairie (Pub Avon edition) - By: , 04 Mar 2005 
Please note that the Avon "original series paperback" editions do NOT have the illustrations by Garth Williams as advertised by Amazon at February 2005. The story is as charming as it ever was, but if you are looking for a replacement for your old worn out paperback, beware that this doesn't contain any of the illustrations earlier/other published versions have.
Life on the Frontier - By: Mark Baker, 08 May 2004 
Pa Ingalls is tired of how crowded the big woods are getting. So he decides to sell the house & move west with his family. Just before the ice breaks, the family loads up their wagon & heads out. They cross the Mississippi River & then head south, settling two days away from Independence, Missouri. Now they have to build a new house & survive the wilderness. Meanwhile, Laura is anxious to see a papoose. And with all the Indiansin the area, she may get her chance.
This is a charming book. It's almost a collection of short stories with many chapters being a self-contained event. Still, through these pages, we get a good picture of life on the American frontier 130 years ago. The book gives plenty of detail about their everyday life without getting bogged down. And it is interesting. Frankly, some of the chapters are so harrowing I felt my pulse quicken. Often I found myself shaking my headin awe at what the Ingalls dealt with on a daily basis. This is a good way to make anyone appreciate just what we have today.
These books are still popular 70 years after they were first written for good reason. They are an entertaining & enlightening look at a bygone era.
A Big Hit - By: , 23 Apr 2004 
My daughter who has just read this book & is absolutely crazy about it. She is nearly 6 & loves the bookin the same way I remember loving it asa child. The way of living is so different, so hard, I think it isfascinating for her. She has been reading more typical books, but theseseem to have grabbed her attentionin a way that modern books can't, thereis so much information entwined with the story. She has now startedreading 'Little Housein the Big Woods' to her teacher's surprise but istotally engrossedin it.