Posted on 01/30/2025 7:00:02 AM PST by dynachrome
Her later autobiography ‘Prairie Fires’ and interviews she did about it reveal details of her childhood she felt didn’t belong in children’s books. Domestic abuse, alcoholism, shiftlessness, usury violations and abject poverty were all there. ‘Pa’ Ingalls was indeed cheerful and charming but he was also utterly impractical, hopping from one railroad scam scheme to another and dragging his family with, in poverty mostly. They had to leave at least one home in the dead of night, debts unpaid, to avoid prison. One or more homesteads were boldly illegal. Pa worked as a Saloon keeper for one dark period and a drunk molested Laura.
Etc
Etc.
“The only character I actually thought was real was the little blond spoiled mean girl!...”
“Nellie “ . Her mother seemed authentic to me since she was so much like some of the woman in my dad’s churches.
“That daughter of hers was a real pistol.”
Rose. IIRC, she was a Libertarian activist.
WOW. Never knew any of that!
Is “film noir” necessarily in black and white, or does it merely have to be about a dark subject?
I was thinking it had to be shot in black and white also.
Little Fairy on the Prairie
Exactly. Regietheater and anti-family themes from the staff running it. But what do you expect from Netflix’s ideal to get America hard left into a dictatorship of those who attack wholesome programming?
They are the purveyors of X rated shows.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.