![]() Pa decides to move his family into his store building in town for the winter. The coming winter is that twenty-first winter, and there will be seven months of blizzards. ![]() Soon afterward, Pa receives another warning from an unexpected source: an old Native American man comes to the general store in town to warn the white settlers that hard winters come in seven-year cycles and the hardest comes at the end of the third cycle. In mid-October, the Ingallses wake to an early blizzard howling around their poorly insulated claim shanty. Upon inspecting it, Pa notes that its walls are the thickest he has ever seen, and fears it is a warning that the upcoming winter will be a very hard one. As they work, she notices a muskrat den in the nearby Big Slough. On a hot August day in the 1880s, at the Ingallses' homestead in Dakota Territory, Laura offers to help Pa stack hay to feed their stock in the winter. In retrospect, they are called Newbery Honor Books. All the fourth to eighth Little House books from 1938 to 1943 were Newbery runners-up. The novel was a runner-up for the Newbery Medal in 1941. It is set in southeastern Dakota Territory during the severe winter of 1880–1881, when she turned 14 years old. The Long Winter is an autobiographical children's novel written by Laura Ingalls Wilder and published in 1940, the sixth of nine books in her Little House series. ![]()
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