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Reliving our Childhood
Beautifully done and educational!

nice but...
A delightfully candid look at life on a ranch.Ok, I will be the first to admit that everything I know about cows can be found in a Burger King wrapper. So when I was given this book by a friend at work, I thought, "Oh joy. A book about ranching. Just what I need to cure my insomnia."
I flipped through the pages, just to be polite, and read the passage on pets. I was immediately drawn back to my own childhood exhortations of "Please, can I keep him Mom?" Fifteen minutes later, I was thoroughly ensconced in the book, my work forgotten.
Don't be fooled by the title. "Do you, Rachel, take Ranching for Better or for Worse" is not just a book about cows. It is a book which touches on the everyday aspects of our lives: Children, pets, spouses, friends, and careers, and all of it is viewed with with a certain equanimity and a wry, gentle sense of humor.
Rachel Klippenstein has captured the essence of Americana in this deceptively humorous book about the life of a ranching family. It is definitely worth reading. Just don't take it to work.
Such a Delight to see someone follow there dream!

Good but not much to compareWhile I think this book is pretty decent, I wish I could find a book with more pictures. While North Dakota is hardly considered a popular tourist destination, there IS some pretty scenery. I think this book would be better if they added some sections with pictures. Otherwise, the book is pretty good. I would recommend it to anyone considering travel in North Dakota (or South Dakota, it also has a section on that state), but then again I have not come across a single other book that focuses on North Dakota as much.
I learned a lot of new things about my home state

Pioneer Flavor After the Civil War
A good book of surviving a 'Grasshopper Summer'.

Miss you, Laura
I Remember Laura: Laura Ingalls Wilder

If you've ever wondered why...
excellent book for travel, armchair or otherwise

A fantastic link to our families and the past!!!

A sequal to The First Four Years
A wonderful mother-daughter collaborationAs the author of the "Little House" book series and as the subject of a long-running television series based on those books, Laura Ingalls Wilder is a truly beloved figure in American popular culture. "On the Way Home" offers an excellent opportunity to "hear" her speak directly from a real-life adventure. Her trek with her husband, Almanzo, and daughter Rose is a classic pioneer tale.
The book is well complemented by a wealth of black-and-white photographs of the family, as well as of the architecture, artifacts, landscapes, and animals that were part of their world. There is also a map of their route.
Laura's prose is very engaging. She writes of the natural landscape, plants, and animals they encountered along the way. She also gives a sense of the ethnic and religious diversity of that time and region. Her journal entries capture the excitement of the growing cities and towns.
This is a short book (120 pages), but it is full and fascinating. When Laura writes of such pleasures as wading in a warm river or picking wild blackberries, you can imagine yourself standing beside her. Recommended as a companion text: "O Pioneers!", by Willa Cather.
On the Way Home

A nostalgic look at a hard life
IntegrityBrokaw and his family's circumstances weren't that much different than others. But, it was how his family was able to handle the hardships through hard work, ingenuity, and integrity that stuck with Brokaw and what made him successful and more importantly happy in life. An important lesson for today's families.
This book is a great view of what made America and the family of that generation important. This is an articulate, uplifting book about an American icon's childhood.
You can take the boy out of South Dakota, but...Brokaw is a thoroughly appealing character in this book. His introduction cites his mother's assessment of the book: that his ego was showing through in some places. True enough, but it's not the sort of display that irritates you--more like the sort where you shake your head and are more than a little charmed. He doesn't spare himself in his account. He was told at one point by his future wife to basically shove off, since he was obviously heading nowhere fast--an assessment that one of his friends cooly confirmed to Brokaw's face. Given where he has gone since then, it's a little comforting to learn that he wasn't some ambitious machine checking off the steps on his ladder to success.
I especially enjoyed his discussion of how his consciousness was raised as regards treatment of American Indians. Time and again, a somewhat cocky Brokaw is shown not to be as smart as he thinks. The response of an Indian woman to his self-assured statement that he knew a lot about Indians since he was from South Dakota--I'll leave that to you to discover. It's a gem.
I've always had a weakness for tales told by people who are out of the limelight, who aren't the immediate images called up when you think of a particular era, who weren't in what some would consider the "mainstream". Tom Brokaw's South Dakota upbringing is just as integral a part of America in the '40's and '50's as that of someone not living in "fly-over" territory. He brings it to life in an engaging way.


Mixed up seriesIt's full of American high school ambience, which I'm not familiar with but found intriguing. It centers on a high school reunion in a small town in the upper Midwest. A death ocurred thirty years previously and the circumstances of that death are mysteriously re-enacted. Partly because they're all middle-aged mid-Westerners (do I put capital letters in the right place?} the large cast of characters gets confusing but after the first hundred pages I figured who was who and then it rapidly accelerates into a page turner (but without any major violence) towards the end.
Very fun and enjoyable
A fun book!