Showing posts with label #ccwomensclassics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #ccwomensclassics. Show all posts

Monday, 25 January 2016

#LittleHouseRAL: Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder


This is my first review for the Little House Read-Along that Lynn and I are hosting. If you'd like to join us you still can! Check out the details and schedule here.

So I read this book waaay back at the beginning of the month; it was actually the first book I read in 2016, but of course I have been totally rubbish at actually writing this post, but here we are. It's not the end of the month yet, I still have time!

I've been so excited to kick off this read-along of a series that I have very few memories of ever having read before. People have been telling me how it's comfort reading for them and I can absolutely see that. 


The book kicks off as winter begins with Laura and her family - Ma, Pa, Mary and baby Carrie - all tucked up snug in their little house as the bears prowl and the weather rages outside the door. The house seems totally impenetrable, protected by the firelight and the sound of Pa's fiddle playing and stocked up with smoked, salted and frozen meat caught by Pa with his gun. It will probably come as no surprise that I loved the air of self-sufficiency running through this book. It provided such an interesting look into life in 1870s America; a period about which I know very little. 

It also made me think a lot about how much we take for granted in our modern lives, and how little most of us actually have to do nowadays. Our houses are heated, our food is pre-packaged, everywhere is easily accessible by car... For Laura and her family so much work and preparation went into things that seem so trivial to us, and it was a really good reminder for me.

I wonder if Mary was actually so perfect though? In every piece of children's literature I love there is always the 'perfect' child to juxtapose the 'unruly' heroine - Diana and Anne, Beth and Jo, countless of Noel Streatfeild's characters - and often I wonder if the perfection is just in the memory of the author (who often was the 'unruly' child, as is the case with Laura Ingalls Wilder, Louisa May Alcott and Noel Streatfeild) or whether it was actually reality. I don't know if there's any way to know, but I found it interesting to wonder!

That said, I did relate to Laura a lot more than I did Mary. I particularly enjoyed the scene where she is arguing with her cousin (I think? The other Laura Ingalls anyway!) about whose baby is prettier, it gave me a little giggle, and the scene with the party was my favourite - such beautiful description, and I always love reading about the ways that people used to entertain themselves before they were transfixed by screens all day long! 

In the spirit of the read-along I decided that I would do an activity each month relating to the book we're reading that month. Because it was easier than shooting a bear, smoking our own meat, or making cheese, we decided to make and dress up paper dolls. Here they are before they were dressed:


Benji (who is three) loved dressing them up. He then took it a step further and covered the entire thing with multi coloured Quality Street wrappers and stickers and made it into a birthday card for his Grandma. Who am I to argue with such creativity? 

I loved this book and I'm really looking forward to reading the next one! Also apologies that I've not been round and commented on everyone's posts yet - sick kids this month have made everything take six times longer than it should!

Sunday, 11 October 2015

The Women's Classic Literature Event

This week The Classics Club, that often ignored mainstay of my blogging life, announced the Women's Classic Literature Event, the idea of which is to read classic literature by women. It runs from now until the end of 2016 and as you can imagine I am super super excited about it!

They also posted a survey of which I will answer some questions here, because who doesn't love a good survey?

Elizabeth Gaskell, Jane Austen, Zora Neale Hurson, George Eliot, Rose Wilder Lane, Louisa May Alcott, & Virginia Woolf.

1. Introduce yourself. Tell us what you're most looking forward to in this event?

I'm Bex and honestly I'm most excited about exploring some of the titles by women already on my list. I'm also really looking forward to seeing what other people are reading and hopefully taking part in some events and talking all things womens literature. 

2. Have you read many classics by women? Why or why not?

I've read all of Austen as well as Jane Eyre, Wutherine Heights and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by the Bronte sisters. I also read To The Lighthouse by Viriginia Woolf in University, which I strongly disliked, and Lady Audley's Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon, which I remember next to nothing about. More modern classics include The Colour Purple by Alice Walker and Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston as well as To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou and The Bell Jar (and selected poetry) by Sylvia Plath. 

Honestly in the past I've not gone out of my way to ensure that I'm reading a lot of classics by women. Naturally my reading tends to be more than 50% female authors but this doesn't seem to translate to classics. I don't know if it's because there's less available (unlikely) or just because there's less that I know about, but hopefully this event will help to rectify that!

3. Pick a classic female writer you can't wait to read for the event. List her date of birth, her place of birth & one of her most famous works.

I've had the Little House series by Laura Ingalls Wilder on my Classics Club list since the start and I'm really excited to finally start it for this event. She was born in February 1867 in Pepin, Wisconsin which only had 837 people living in it at the 2010 census so I can't imagine how tiny when she lived there!

8. Will you be joining us for this event immediately or will you wait until the new year starts?

I'm going to be joining in December, although I'm doing Hanna's Moby Dick readalong starting tomorrow so that's a classic at least, but then there's Nonfiction November so I'm kind of tied up with that (in the most awesome way of course). 

9. Do you plan to read as inspiration pulls or will you make out a preset list?

I plan to do a bit of both. I'm including here all the titles by women left on my list and then I'll probably do some browsing at Persephone when we're there on the bookshop crawl and be inspired by what others are reading as well. The titles I have on my list are: 
  • A Room of One's Own by Virginia Woolf
  • A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle
  • Ariel by Sylvia Plath
  • Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons
  • Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
  • Jamaica Inn by Daphne Du Maurier
  • Let the Circle Be Unbroken, The Road to Memphis by Mildred D. Taylor
  • Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day by Winifred Watson
  • Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm by Kate Douglas Wiggins
  • Save Me the Waltz by Zelda Fitzgerald
  • The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
  • The Little House Series by Laura Ingalls Wilder
  • The Professor by Charlotte Bronte
12. Do you hope to host a readalong for the group?



Yes! I'd like some company reading the Little House books so I'm going to do a series readalong starting in December. Hopefully some other people will be interested in joining me for at least some of the books. The tentative schedule will be thus:

December: Little House in the Big Woods, Little House on the Prairie
January: On the Banks of Plum Creek, By the Shores of Silver Lake
February: The Long Winter
March: Little Town on the Prairie, Those Happy Golden Years
April: Farmer Boy, The First Four Years

Let me know in the comments if you're interested in joining me for some or all of it. I'll post an official schedule and sign up next month sometime. 

13. Is there an author or title you'd love to read with a group or buddy for this event?

I need a buddy to read The Age of Innocence with me! I started it before and couldn't get into it but really want to. 

Excited for this event! Please leave links to your posts about it in the comments, I'd love to check them out! For more details check out this post or find the full survey here.