Carrie Woodward (I think) - it's been a long time since I've read it. I'll check the title.
Doyle ,'Life of the Party'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Caddie Woodlawn
(is that the one you are thinking of, sumi?)
Yes!
My memory is very strange but at least I got the initials right.
The thing about the past that confuses me is that it seems from boooks and such that there was no gradual change from being a child to being an adult. Just Boom! You are a lady!
Part of that was because a child's job was learning how to be a grownup. Every child was doing some sort of work as soon as they could physically manage it. Yeah, there was running around and playing, but that happened after the chickens were fed, the grain was ground, and if you didn't need to do some other chore. Even as late as the '60s, when I was a kid, it was not uncommon for school to let the farm kids skip a few days when it was time to get the hay in or harvest some other crop.
I had Caddie Woodlawn! Love!
Do you mean pioneers in the West, Aimee, or would that include early New England books such as The Witch of Blackbird Pond?
Any pioneers, really. I'll add that one to the list.
Elizabeth George Speare also wrote Calico Captive, which was loosely based on a real Indian captivity story.
I read a lot of books by Lois Lenski [link]
the ones in particular that I remember are Mary Jemison, Indian Captive and Strawberry Girl, but I think there are a bunch of pioneer/farm ones in there.
I'm trying to remember if I read any other pioneer-type books, and nothing is coming to mind. If you're looking for surviving-in-harsh-isolation stuff, there's Island of the Blue Dolphins and My Side of the Mountain.
The thing about the past that confuses me is that it seems from boooks and such that there was no gradual change from being a child to being an adult. Just Boom! You are a lady!
One thing I love about Little Town on the Prairie is that it does a good job of showing how teen fads were rampant even in isolated frontier towns in the 19th century. Autograph books, name cards, "fringe" bangs, hoopskirts--it was all about keeping up with fashion and not being out of style, even if your town hadn't seen a copy of the latest ladies magazine from New York City in several months.