Search Site   
Current News Stories
Butter exports, domestic usage down in February
Heavy rain stalls 2024 spring planting season for Midwest
Obituary: Guy Dean Jackson
Painted Mail Pouch barns going, going, but not gone
Versatile tractor harvests a $232,000 bid at Wendt
US farms increasingly reliant on contract workers 
Tomahawk throwing added to Ladies’ Sports Day in Ohio
Jepsen and Sonnenbert honored for being Ohio Master Farmers
High oleic soybeans can provide fat, protein to dairy cows
PSR and SGD enter into an agreement 
Fish & wildlife plans stream trout opener
   
News Articles
Search News  
   

Views and opinions: For Little House fans, new kids’ book will be a delight

 

Hardscrabble by Sandra Dallas

c.2018, Sleeping Bear Press

$15.95/$19.95 Canada

255 pages

Life is hard. Even as a kid, you’ve got things to worry about: getting good grades, getting along with your teacher, making friends, making the team, dealing with Mean Girls, trying to be who you are.

It isn’t easy – but as you’ll see in Hardscrabble by Sandra Dallas, things could be a whole lot worse.

The prairie was awfully flat. From the train platform, 12-year-old Belle Martin could see for miles. It had been a long trip from Iowa, and she knew Mama had missed Papa.

After they lost the farm in Ft. Madison and Papa went to stake a claim in Colorado, they all missed him so. Now they had a new farm and a new home, and he’d sent for them – 15-year-old Carrie; Belle; 8-year-old Frank; Becky, Sarah and Gully; Mama; and a baby yet unnamed – all waiting for Papa in Mingo, Colo.

He was excited to see them, too, and happy to bring them to their new homestead on the prairie. He was extra proud of the house he’d made of dirt, which he called a “soddy,” although Belle could tell that Mama was disappointed, but nobody said anything.

Mama wasn’t feeling well, yet she and Carrie began cleaning their new home. Belle couldn’t stop thinking of the things they’d left behind in Iowa, which included all their Christmas decorations, Carrie’s piano and a house with real floors.

But she couldn’t complain. Living on the prairie had its rewards. The prairie sky was huge, fields were beautiful, there were places to play and room to run.

One of the neighbors gave Frank a pony and, though modern young ladies in 1910 didn’t have opportunities for such things, Belle dreamed of being a cowgirl. Mama had a big garden, and the family had even begun to make good friends of the neighbors who lived on homesteads nearby.

Still, it was a hardscrabble life, which sometimes meant disaster. A homesteader might have a good crop ruined by hail or eaten by hungry grasshoppers. Poor soil could mean a bad harvest. Sickness could strike and doctors were hours away. Those were times when a homesteader found out just how helpful his neighbors really were.

Let’s just cut to the chase: Your child is going to like Hardscrabble.

It could be impossible, in fact, for her to resist this modern, updated Little House on the Prairie-like tale of hardship and homesteading, set in the not-long-ago – but don’t think this is a tale of woe. The challenges of life in 1910 are not the focus here.

Instead, author Sandra Dallas takes real situations from early 20th century American history – good, difficult, quaint and fun - and weaves them matter-of-factly among characters that sparkle with relatability. Kids won’t get drama or sensationalism from this book, but they will get a sense of the way life just was.

For new generations of Little House fans and for their mothers who loved that series, too, Hardscrabble will quickly become a favorite. Getting your 8- to 13-year-old involved in this book truly shouldn’t be hard.

 

Terri Schlichenmeyer has been reading since she was three years old and never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a hill in Wisconsin with two dogs and 14,000 books.

5/10/2018