As I was reading through all the posts that compared the Little House books to the Little House on the Prairie television show, I realized On the Banks of Plum Creek was skipped. Yikes! How did that happen? I think I'm too much of an Almanzo/Dean Butler fan and wanted to get to the romance. LOL! Though that book was mentioned, we didn't journey through On the Banks of Plum Creek like we did with most of the other books. Let's do that now.
Dedicated to Laura Ingalls Wilder, her famous children's books, and the shows based on them.
Wednesday, May 7, 2025
Book Versus TV Show: On the Banks of Plum Creek Versus Season 1 of Little House on the Prairie
Friday, March 28, 2025
Books Versus TV Show: Laura and Almanzo's Married Life - The First Four Years Versus Seasons 7 - 9 of Little House on the Prairie
Here we are at perhaps the most challenging stage of finding similarities between Laura Ingalls Wilder's books and the Little House on the Prairie television show.
The First Four Years opens with Laura asking her fiancé, Almanzo, to do something else other than farming because she never wanted to marry a farmer. She didn't want them to work hard while people made money off of them (pg 4). Almanzo explains that farmers are the only ones who are truly independent. He tells her that he will try it for three years, and if he doesn't find success, he will quit and do anything she wants him to do (pg 5). Book Almanzo is more forward-thinking and interested in a full partnership with his wife than TV Almanzo is in those early days. "He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not" and "Laura Ingalls Wilder" prove he wants to be in charge.
As we already know, after some challenges, TV Laura and Almanzo get married at the blind school in Sleepy Eye, sharing an anniversary with Mary and Adam, before settling into the house Almanzo had previously shared with his sister, Eliza Jane ("Laura Ingalls Wilder").
On the morning of August 25, 1885, Laura Elizabeth Ingalls becomes Laura Ingalls Wilder in the book and in real life. She leaves her parents' home, is married by Reverend Brown, goes back to her parents' house for dinner, and then leaves her family behind as she and Almanzo drive to their new home across town in De Smet. (pgs 9-10).
The first year is filled with Laura learning how to run her household, hosting threshers at harvest time, and Laura worrying over money because Manly mortgaged the house for $500 (pg 57). But there are fun times too, as the young couple continue going on buggy rides, taking their ponies out, and hosting their family on New Year's Day. Laura also discovers she is pregnant (pg 43).
TV Laura has a different set of experiences.
- An old friend of Almanzo's comes to town, and Laura fears they are having an affair ("Divorce, Walnut Grove Style").
- A women's rights activist arrives in Walnut Grove, and the women of town move into Nellie's Restaurant until the men of Walnut Grove sign the petition. Though the newlyweds don't wish to be apart, Laura feels she should support her mother, and she moves into town ("Oleson Versus Oleson").
- Almanzo is eager to have children, but Laura wants to keep teaching. Then, when Almanzo's older brother, Royal, leaves his mischievous boys with the Wilders while he takes a vacation with his wife, Almanzo is certain the experience will deter Laura from wanting kids ("The Nephews").
- Laura resigns as Walnut Grove's school teacher when Mrs. Oleson interferes. Almanzo and she have a disagreement as Laura tries out new recipes to keep her mind off not feeling useful ("Goodbye, Miss Wilder"). As you will recall, in the books Laura only taught school to help her family. She never really liked it.
- Laura gets pregnant in Season 7, and her pregnancy will last three-quarters of the way through Season 8, where a series of life-altering events plague the Wilders, and Laura learns about the $500 mortgage on the house ("Days of Sunshine, Days of Shadow").
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
Books Versus TV Show: Laura and Almanzo's Courtship - These Happy Golden Years versus Season 6 of Little House on the Prairie & the Episode "Laura Ingalls Wilder" (Season 7)
The courtship of Laura Elizabeth Ingalls and Almanzo James Wilder is part of the reason we are still talking about them, their families, Wilder's books, and the shows based upon them. Thursday, March 6, 2025
Books Versus TV Show: The Long Winter & Little Town on the Prairie Books Versus Season 6 of Little House on the Prairie
Just like we did last week, we are going to compare some of the Little House books to the Little House on the Prairie television show. If you missed our first post, which compared Little House in the Big Woods and Little House on the Prairie to the pilot, you can find it here.
Wilder's readers were introduced to her future husband in the second book of the Little House series, Farmer Boy. They meet Almanzo and his family--Mother, Father, Royal, Eliza Jane, and Alice. That is the only look into the Wilder family until Almanzo is reintroduced in The Long Winter, along with his brother and sister, Royal and Eliza Jane, and Little Town on the Prairie, where Laura's attraction to Wilder's Morgan horses is made clear. Television viewers, however, don't meet Almanzo until Season 6 of Little House on the Prairie, when he is an adult. The only glimpse viewers get of Almanzo's childhood is in the Season 8 episode, "A Christmas They Never Forgot."
- Perley Day Wilder's name is spelled Parley.
- Their paternal grandfather's name is incorrectly stated as Parley Day Wilder, instead of Abel Wilder. Their paternal grandmother is listed as Alice Wilder instead of Hannah (Payne) Wilder.
- Their maternal grandparents are shown as Royal and Angeline Martin, not Justin Day II and Diadema (Bateman) Day.
- Some birthdates are incorrect: James Wilder's should be 1813; Angeline's should be 1819; Eliza Jane's is actually 1850; Almanzo's is 1857; and the youngest Wilder brother, Perley Day, was born in 1869.












