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1、www.readinga-SVYVisit www.readinga- for thousands of books and materials.LEVELED BOOK VWritten by Katherine Follett Laura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers LifeA Reading AZ Level V Leveled BookWord Count:1,348Laura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers Lifewww.readinga-Laura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers LifeLaura Ingalls
2、Wilder:A Pioneers LifeLevel V Leveled Book Learning AZWritten by Katherine FollettIllustrated by Stephen MarchesiAll rights reserved.www.readinga-CorrelationLEVEL VR4040Fountas&PinnellReading RecoveryDRAPhoto Credits:Back cover,pages 8,12:The Granger Collection,NYC;title page:David Young-Wolff/Photo
3、Edit;page 5:ZUMA Press,Inc./Alamy;page 9:Image Asset Management Ltd./Alamy;page 13:Buddy Mays/Alamy;page 15:Bettmann/CorbisBack cover:Laura Ingalls Wilder in 1917(around age 50).Written by Katherine Follett1516Laura loved answering letters from her fans and traveling to readings and book signings.Ye
4、t she was always happy to return home to Manly and Rocky Ridge Farm.The couple both lived into their nineties.After her death in 1957,Laura Ingalls Wilders books lived on,even becoming a TV series in 1974.Her stories of pioneer life still delight young readers today.Her life has become part of Ameri
5、can history.Glossaryhardship(n.)pain or loss;something that causes pain or loss(p.7)homestead(n.)property given by the U.S.government to people who settled and farmed on the land,especially in the 1800s(p.9)income(n.)money that is received from work or another source(p.11)pioneers(n.)people who are
6、among the first to settle in a new place(p.5)prairie(n.)a wide,flat plain covered with grasses(p.4)publisher(n.)the person or company who makes writing available to the public,either in print or on the Internet(p.14)reciting(v.)saying something aloud from memory(p.7)stroke(n.)a rapid loss of brain f
7、unction resulting from interrupted blood flow to the brain(p.8)vivid(adj.)very bright and strong(p.5)Laura Ingalls Wilder signs copies of her books sometime around 1940.Laura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers Life Level Vwww.readinga-Laura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers LifeLaura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers LifeLe
8、vel V Leveled Book Learning AZWritten by Katherine FollettIllustrated by Stephen MarchesiAll rights reserved.www.readinga-CorrelationLEVEL VR4040Fountas&PinnellReading RecoveryDRAPhoto Credits:Back cover,pages 8,12:The Granger Collection,NYC;title page:David Young-Wolff/PhotoEdit;page 5:ZUMA Press,I
9、nc./Alamy;page 9:Image Asset Management Ltd./Alamy;page 13:Buddy Mays/Alamy;page 15:Bettmann/CorbisBack cover:Laura Ingalls Wilder in 1917(around age 50).Written by Katherine Follett1516Laura loved answering letters from her fans and traveling to readings and book signings.Yet she was always happy t
10、o return home to Manly and Rocky Ridge Farm.The couple both lived into their nineties.After her death in 1957,Laura Ingalls Wilders books lived on,even becoming a TV series in 1974.Her stories of pioneer life still delight young readers today.Her life has become part of American history.Glossaryhard
11、ship(n.)pain or loss;something that causes pain or loss(p.7)homestead(n.)property given by the U.S.government to people who settled and farmed on the land,especially in the 1800s(p.9)income(n.)money that is received from work or another source(p.11)pioneers(n.)people who are among the first to settl
12、e in a new place(p.5)prairie(n.)a wide,flat plain covered with grasses(p.4)publisher(n.)the person or company who makes writing available to the public,either in print or on the Internet(p.14)reciting(v.)saying something aloud from memory(p.7)stroke(n.)a rapid loss of brain function resulting from i
13、nterrupted blood flow to the brain(p.8)vivid(adj.)very bright and strong(p.5)Laura Ingalls Wilder signs copies of her books sometime around 1940.Laura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers Life Level V1314Happiness at Rocky RidgeAt twenty-seven,Laura set out once more in a covered wagon.She and Manly bought a s
14、mall farm near Mansfield,Missouri,in the foothills of the Ozark Mountains.It was rough,wooded,and rocky,but Laura instantly knew it was home.With hard work,Rocky Ridge grew into a beautiful,successful farm.After so much wandering,Laura was content.In time,Lauras daughter,Rose,moved away to San Franc
15、isco.There she became a well-known journalist,making a living at something Laura herself had always lovedwriting.Now that life on Rocky Ridge Farm was comfortable,could Laura do the same?The Little House BooksLaura began to pour her memories onto the page.Sometimes she would stay up all night writin
16、g at a little desk that Manly built for her.Soon,she had written an entire book about her early years under the towering trees of Wisconsin.She called it Little House in the Big Woods.Rose sent it to a publisher.Sixty-four-year-old Laura didnt think much would come of it.After all,it was the 1930s.P
17、eople had cars,electricity,radiowho wanted to hear about doing backbreaking chores in a dark forest?The book was an immediate hit.Laura brought to life the howling winter wind,the crackling fire,and the joyful skip of Pas fiddle.She captured the thrill of meeting animals in the wilderness.She called
18、 up the joy that a simple rag doll could bring to a pioneer girl who lived in a rough log cabin.The mailbox at Rocky Ridge overflowed with letters from young readers begging for more.Laura wrote about her time on the Kansas prairie in Little House on the Prairie and near Walnut Grove in On the Banks
19、 of Plum Creek.The frightful winter in De Smet became The Long Winter,and the towns recovery became Little Town on the Prairie.Rocky Ridge Farm was so successful that a local newspaper asked Laura to write a column offering farm advice.It was her first professional writing job.“It is the sweet,simpl
20、e things of life which are the real ones after all.”Laura Ingalls WilderLaura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers Life Level V34Table of ContentsIntroduction .4The Prairie and the Big Woods .5Hard Times .7Settling in Dakota Territory .9Young Lady Laura .11Happiness at Rocky Ridge .13The Little House Books .14
21、Glossary .16IntroductionThree-year-old Laura Ingalls and her older sister,Mary,followed their father across the vast,rolling prairie.Warm wind stirred Lauras hair,and insects and birds sang in the rippling grass.On the walk home,the sunset stained the sky pink and gold.When Laura stepped inside thei
22、r little log cabin,she stopped short.Ma lay in bed,and the doctor was there.“Come meet your new baby sister,”Ma said in a tired but proud voice.This was one of Laura Ingalls Wilders earliest and most powerful memories.It featured the two things that would shape her famous books:her close family and
23、her love for wild,open spaces.PepinDe SmetPierreWalnut GroveSt.PaulDes MoinesSpringfieldMadisonLincolnTopekaIndependenceJefferson CityMansfieldSouth DakotaWisconsinMinnesotaNebraskaKansasMissouriIllinoisOklahomaIowaWhere Laura LivedNEWSUNITED STATESstate capitalsLauras homesKEYLaura Ingalls Wilder:A
24、 Pioneers Life Level V34Table of ContentsIntroduction .4The Prairie and the Big Woods .5Hard Times .7Settling in Dakota Territory .9Young Lady Laura .11Happiness at Rocky Ridge .13The Little House Books .14Glossary .16IntroductionThree-year-old Laura Ingalls and her older sister,Mary,followed their
25、father across the vast,rolling prairie.Warm wind stirred Lauras hair,and insects and birds sang in the rippling grass.On the walk home,the sunset stained the sky pink and gold.When Laura stepped inside their little log cabin,she stopped short.Ma lay in bed,and the doctor was there.“Come meet your ne
26、w baby sister,”Ma said in a tired but proud voice.This was one of Laura Ingalls Wilders earliest and most powerful memories.It featured the two things that would shape her famous books:her close family and her love for wild,open spaces.PepinDe SmetPierreWalnut GroveSt.PaulDes MoinesSpringfieldMadiso
27、nLincolnTopekaIndependenceJefferson CityMansfieldSouth DakotaWisconsinMinnesotaNebraskaKansasMissouriIllinoisOklahomaIowaWhere Laura LivedNEWSUNITED STATESstate capitalsLauras homesKEYLaura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers Life Level V1314Happiness at Rocky RidgeAt twenty-seven,Laura set out once more in a
28、 covered wagon.She and Manly bought a small farm near Mansfield,Missouri,in the foothills of the Ozark Mountains.It was rough,wooded,and rocky,but Laura instantly knew it was home.With hard work,Rocky Ridge grew into a beautiful,successful farm.After so much wandering,Laura was content.In time,Laura
29、s daughter,Rose,moved away to San Francisco.There she became a well-known journalist,making a living at something Laura herself had always lovedwriting.Now that life on Rocky Ridge Farm was comfortable,could Laura do the same?The Little House BooksLaura began to pour her memories onto the page.Somet
30、imes she would stay up all night writing at a little desk that Manly built for her.Soon,she had written an entire book about her early years under the towering trees of Wisconsin.She called it Little House in the Big Woods.Rose sent it to a publisher.Sixty-four-year-old Laura didnt think much would
31、come of it.After all,it was the 1930s.People had cars,electricity,radiowho wanted to hear about doing backbreaking chores in a dark forest?The book was an immediate hit.Laura brought to life the howling winter wind,the crackling fire,and the joyful skip of Pas fiddle.She captured the thrill of meeti
32、ng animals in the wilderness.She called up the joy that a simple rag doll could bring to a pioneer girl who lived in a rough log cabin.The mailbox at Rocky Ridge overflowed with letters from young readers begging for more.Laura wrote about her time on the Kansas prairie in Little House on the Prairi
33、e and near Walnut Grove in On the Banks of Plum Creek.The frightful winter in De Smet became The Long Winter,and the towns recovery became Little Town on the Prairie.Rocky Ridge Farm was so successful that a local newspaper asked Laura to write a column offering farm advice.It was her first professi
34、onal writing job.“It is the sweet,simple things of life which are the real ones after all.”Laura Ingalls WilderLaura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers Life Level V1112Young Lady LauraMary had heard about a college for blind students in Iowa,and she wanted more than anything to go there.Laura was now old eno
35、ugh to teach school,and she knew the income would help Mary pay for college.She accepted a teaching job in a settlement twelve miles from De Smet.Sixteen-year-old Laura bravely said goodbye to her family,but she dreaded being away from home for an entire semester.When the first week of school ended,
36、she got a surprise.Almanzo Wilder,a young homesteader she knew from De Smet,pulled up to the schoolhouse in a beautiful horse-drawn sleigh.He offered to bring Laura home on weekends.During their long drives across the prairie,their friendship blossomed into love.One night,Almanzo asked Laura to marr
37、y him.She said yes.Laura and Manly,as she nicknamed him,moved to his homestead outside De Smet.Soon they welcomed a daughter,Rose.Unfortunately,the young family was hit with a string of bad luck.A hailstorm destroyed their wheat crop,and then Laura and Manly fell ill.Laura recovered fully,but Manly
38、would walk with a limp for the rest of his life.Laura gave birth to a baby boy,but he only survived for two weeks.Then their house burned to the ground.Still a pioneer girl,Laura searched for a new place where they could get a fresh start.It wasnt long before she found her home.Laura and Almanzo Wil
39、der in 1885,shortly after their marriage“Suffering passes,while love is eternal.”Laura Ingalls WilderLaura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers Life Level V56The Prairie and the Big WoodsLaura Ingalls was born on February 7,1867,in the woods of Pepin,Wisconsin.When Laura was just two years old,Ma and Pa Ingall
40、s packed all their belongings into a covered wagon and headed toward Independence,Kansas.It was the first of many moves the Ingalls family would make during Lauras childhood.They were pioneers,some of the first non-Native Americans in the American West.Laura formed vivid memories in their log cabin
41、on the Kansas prairie,but the family only lived there for about a year.They had mistakenly settled on the Osage Indian reservation,and they had to leave,so they returned to Wisconsin.Four-year-old Laura watched sadly as the Kansas prairie disappeared behind their covered wagon.She was too young to r
42、emember living in Wisconsin as a baby.When they returned,though,Laura discovered a wonderful new world.The big woods were dark,wild,and mysterious.Laura loved being outdoors,and on long winter evenings,Pa played his fiddle for the family.His music accompanied the happiest days of Lauras childhood.Ma
43、(Caroline)and Pa(Charles)IngallsLaura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers Life Level V56The Prairie and the Big WoodsLaura Ingalls was born on February 7,1867,in the woods of Pepin,Wisconsin.When Laura was just two years old,Ma and Pa Ingalls packed all their belongings into a covered wagon and headed toward
44、Independence,Kansas.It was the first of many moves the Ingalls family would make during Lauras childhood.They were pioneers,some of the first non-Native Americans in the American West.Laura formed vivid memories in their log cabin on the Kansas prairie,but the family only lived there for about a yea
45、r.They had mistakenly settled on the Osage Indian reservation,and they had to leave,so they returned to Wisconsin.Four-year-old Laura watched sadly as the Kansas prairie disappeared behind their covered wagon.She was too young to remember living in Wisconsin as a baby.When they returned,though,Laura
46、 discovered a wonderful new world.The big woods were dark,wild,and mysterious.Laura loved being outdoors,and on long winter evenings,Pa played his fiddle for the family.His music accompanied the happiest days of Lauras childhood.Ma(Caroline)and Pa(Charles)IngallsLaura Ingalls Wilder:A Pioneers Life
47、Level V1112Young Lady LauraMary had heard about a college for blind students in Iowa,and she wanted more than anything to go there.Laura was now old enough to teach school,and she knew the income would help Mary pay for college.She accepted a teaching job in a settlement twelve miles from De Smet.Si
48、xteen-year-old Laura bravely said goodbye to her family,but she dreaded being away from home for an entire semester.When the first week of school ended,she got a surprise.Almanzo Wilder,a young homesteader she knew from De Smet,pulled up to the schoolhouse in a beautiful horse-drawn sleigh.He offere
49、d to bring Laura home on weekends.During their long drives across the prairie,their friendship blossomed into love.One night,Almanzo asked Laura to marry him.She said yes.Laura and Manly,as she nicknamed him,moved to his homestead outside De Smet.Soon they welcomed a daughter,Rose.Unfortunately,the
50、young family was hit with a string of bad luck.A hailstorm destroyed their wheat crop,and then Laura and Manly fell ill.Laura recovered fully,but Manly would walk with a limp for the rest of his life.Laura gave birth to a baby boy,but he only survived for two weeks.Then their house burned to the gro