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For anyone who has ever wanted to step into the world of a favorite book, here is a pioneer pilgrimage, a tribute to Laura Ingalls Wilder, and a hilarious account of butter-churning obsession. Wendy McClure is on a quest to find the world of beloved Little House on the Prairie author Laura Ingalls Wilder-a fantastic realm of fiction, history, and places she's never been to, yet somehow knows by heart. She retraces the pioneer journey of the Ingalls family- looking for the Big Woods among the medium trees in Wisconsin, wading in Plum Creek, and enduring a prairie hailstorm in South Dakota. She immerses herself in all things Little House, and explores the story from fact to fiction, and from the TV shows to the annual summer pageants in Laura's hometowns. Whether she's churning butter in her apartment or sitting in a replica log cabin, McClure is always in pursuit of "the Laura experience." Along the way she comes to understand how Wilder's life and work have shaped our ideas about girlhood and the American West. The Wilder Life is a loving, irreverent, spirited tribute to a series of books that have inspired generations of American women. It is also an incredibly funny first-person account of obsessive reading, and a story about what happens when we reconnect with our childhood touchstones-and find that our old love has only deepened.
Poetry. Fiction. Drama. Women's Studies. "I can't remember the last time I read something so familiar and unsettling like meeting someone you love after they come back from a long journey wearing differently-colored eyes. Like if H.P. Lovecraft had had a hand in writing The Book of Common Prayer. It's playful, and frightening, and truer, somehow, than the original." Mallory Ortberg, Texts from Jane Eyre "A virtuosic display of wit, humor, and surreal beauty. Like the erasures of Jonathan Safran Foer's Tree of Codes and Yedda Morrison's Darkness, Emily Anderson's partially masticated reimaginings of Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House on the Prairie series gets inside the logic of its source text. With uncanny insight, Little reveals what had always been simmering just beneath these novels' familiar surfaces. (Mostly doughnuts and motherbutter). Jesse Miller, reviews editor, Full Stop "Apple cheeked readers who curled up with Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House books as children and cheered the little family and their epic industriousness, please be forewarned. Anderson's devilish re-writing exhumes and animates a series of haunting and sometimes disturbingly funny sub- narratives. Delving deep into the American psyche, Little will leave you wondering how you missed the 'Certificate to Missouri' clutched in your complicit little hand. What else have you squandered? Who else have you 'loved?'" Yedda Morrison, Darkness, Crop, and Girl Scout Nation "Come for the Michael Landon Flip Book; stay for the richly rewoven story that excavates hidden moments in Little House on the Prairie and pays playful homage to fan favorites like prairie bitch Nellie Oleson. Little is a new classic, skillfully foraging Laura Ingalls Wilder's much-loved series to create an (ir)reverent rereading that pioneers the new frontier of Little House on the Prairie in the 21st- century." Alison Fraser, Animalia"
WET was one of the seminal avant-garde magazines of the 1970s. Matt Groening and others got their start here.