On the Way Home
Diary by Laura Ingalls Wilder / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the song by Neil Young, see Last Time Around.
On the Way Home is the diary of an American farm wife, Laura Ingalls Wilder, during her 1894 migration with her husband Almanzo Wilder and their seven-year-old daughter, Rose, from De Smet, South Dakota, to Mansfield, Missouri, where they settled permanently.[1][2]
Quick Facts Author, Subject ...
![]() Front dustjacket, first edition | |
Author | Laura Ingalls Wilder |
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Subject | Family migration, frontier life |
Genre | Diary, children's literature[1] |
Publisher | Harper & Row |
Publication date | November 12, 1962[2] |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (hardcover) |
Pages | 101 pp. |
OCLC | 317883683 |
LC Class | F598 .W54[1] |
Preceded by | The First Four Years (fiction) |
Followed by | West From Home |
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It provides a detailed, daily description of the family's migration and includes commentary by Rose ("a setting by Rose Wilder Lane").[1] It was published in 1962, after Laura's death, by Harper & Bros., who had published her Little House series of novels. It is sometimes considered part of the series, which is narrowly a series of eight autobiographical children's novels based on Wilder's life from about 1870 to 1894 in South Dakota, ages about three to 27.