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Another great book

A wonderful twist on the normal fairy tale, with excellent writing and a great plot. The characters really sparkle, but are also gritty and real. Fantastic read! Can't wait to read more from this author.

Beautiful fairy tales! Love the illustrations too.

Not my favorite, but good.

I love this series! Can't wait to read the next one.

A marvelous adventure story with plenty of twists and turns! The writing is great, and the plot moves quickly with plenty of hair-raising danger. Hornung is a master at painting lovable scoundrels and villains that you love to the point where you actually want them to succeed in their crimes and escape the police! Excellent characters balanced on the sides of good and evil!

I was disappointed in the portrayal of the one female character though. She was just a perfect porcelain doll with no color or life for most of the book.

Reminds me of Sir Walter Scott's writing. Wonderful story! I love it!

This is not my favorite out of the Little House books, but still a really good story! The writing is beautiful, and the more I reread this series, the more I love it!
In this book, Laura and her family are following the railroad where her father has a job keeping the books and distributing the men's pay. But the railroad men are a rough group, and Laura worries for her father's safety. Once the railroad has finished their work, the Ingalls family stays the winter in the surveyors cabin. But as soon as spring begins, there are settlers rushing in to stake a claim on the surrounding land. Mr. Ingalls will have to be quick to get his claim registered before all the land is gone.

It's interesting to see how Laura and her sisters are a little more wild and free in this book. There is no town, no neighbors to see, so their behavior is a little more unreserved. They are influenced by their wild cousins who gallop around on ponies, hooting and playing. Their mother doesn't like it though, and urges them to behave properly and wear their sunbonnets.

In the other books of this series, the greatest enemy of the family is nature itself. They have to survive the grasshoppers who eat all their crops. They have to survive the harsh winters and wild weather. But in this book, we see the threats from other people. Rough railroad men who swear and steal and get drunk. Robbers who sneak up behind you on the trail. Or claim jumpers who would murder just to get the land you live on.

Despite all the dangers, the Ingalls family meet life on the prairie with courage and resilience and a cheerful heart!