She's a Hollywood Western. She's Jack Kerouac, but in a n ap dress with braids.
She is one of the most important American children's authors of the twentieth century.
She's the basis for a television show still watched around the world. I literally wake up in the middle of the night and go, somebody somewhere is watching Little as the Brow.
Women will come up to me, cry and saying, my childhood was miserable. In Little House in the Prairie was my escape.
She's been called a hero, a racist, a feminist, and a propagandist.
Consider a Native child in their classroom reading it aloud, and they come to that sentence, the only good Indian is a dead Indian.
She is Laura Ingles Wilder. Did you know she was a real person. In the nineteen thirties, Laura Ingles Wylder wrote the nine Little House on the Prairie books based on her childhood on the American Frontier Way or another. She's been with us ever since. Oh I love I loved that.
I loved Little House on the Prairie.
It's just a perfect book. I've loved Laura for as long as I can remember. As a kid, I used to map out her travels on my parents Atlas, and I'm not alone. Every summer, thousands of people from around the world pilgrimage to her little houses in tiny towns from the middle of the country. Now I'm going too. We're literally on the prairie. I went in search of Laura, the real Laura. Who is this person I love so much?
Should I love her? The story of Laura is just as complicated as the story of America, because she is America for better and worse.
So if we pretend the past was not as controversial and difficult and racist as it was, then how are we going to deal with the racist issues were grappling with today in.
A country currently at odds with itself and its history. Could there be a better time for this exploration? There's never been a better time than now. I'm Glennys McNichol, and this is Wilder. Listen to Wilder on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.