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(Date Posted:05/20/2007 8:54 PM)
Little Heathens?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-comfficeffice" />Mildred Armstrong KalishBantam,?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-comffice:smarttags" />st1ate Year="2007" Day="29" Month="5">May 29 2007/st1ate>ISBN:0553804952Mildred Armstrong Kalishprovides a deep look back to growing up on a farm inIowaduring the Depression.Ms. Kalish's family of seven lived a frugal lifestyle in which three generations resided in the home with the only missing person being her exiled father although why she was not sure.Her cousins lived on nearby farms so the extended family was nearby to help if needed.The key to this superb discerning memoir is Ms. Kalish avoids acrimony and sugared (except when grandpa bought some) nostalgia to provide a vivid picture of a bygone era in which an extended family was there to raise the children with positive values.Life on the farm during harsh economic conditions was fun to a preadolescent Mildred although some chores were simply work.With black and white pictures to enhance the era and "farm food" recipes that were not microwave, LITTLE HEATHENS is a well written winner providing a powerful look at the 1930s in theMidwest.Ms. Kalish showcases how different life was back then from today when for instance the three Klausner brothers live inGeorgia,New JerseyandTexasrespectively and outhouses is a Three Stooges' joke.Harriet Klausner
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