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Grass of The Earth: Immigrant Life in the Dakota Country (Borealis Books)

di Aagot Raaen

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382659,413 (3.25)5
This is an engaging, richly detailed biography of a family of Norwegian immigrant homesteaders in eastern North Dakota in the late 1800s. Educator and world traveler Aagot Raaen wrote this reminiscence late in her life. Like Giants in the Earth and Old Jules, Grass of the Earth deals frankly with a darker side of pioneer life on the prairie.… (altro)
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I saw this reviewed by someone on LT, and thought it would be interesting to read the story of Norwegian immigrants, told by a woman. My mother's side of the family came from Norway, albeit in the 1920s and to Chicago and city life. [Grass of the Earth] is about an earlier group of Norwegian immigrants in the mid to late 1800s who end up in North Dakota, farming the newly available land.

This is a simply written book, mostly told from the point of view of a younger daughter in the family. The author is the older sister. The family - father, mother, brother, and three sisters, one of whom is an invalid - has a small farm. They work incredibly hard every day with very little to show for it. The father also is an alcoholic who often spends the money they are able to save in the saloons of the nearest town, disappearing for months at a time. This lack of money leads to them taking out a mortgage on their farm and struggling most of their lives to figure out how to pay it off. The father does overcome his addiction after about a decade, and the family fortunes begin to make a small turn for the better.

The book focuses on the day to day grind of small farm life. Hunger, lack of clothing, extreme temperatures, etc. But the siblings strive to better themselves through any education opportunities they can find. They value hard work and independence to an extreme, and deny themselves most pleasures. They rely on the Bible for wisdom.They are friendly with neighbors, and though they help others freely, they are reluctant to accept help themselves. I found it interesting that there was no mention of the Native people that were likely living in the Dakotas when these immigrants arrived and started taking over the land.

Raaen attended school whenever she could afford it and be absent from the farm. When she was 30, she managed to graduate from a pre-college school, I imagine kind of like a high school. In 1913, she graduated from the University of Minnesota. She taught and was a school administrator for the rest of her life. She wrote this book near the end of her life.

Though this book is simply written and has some inconsistencies in point of view, it is a really interesting look at one family's immigrant experience. I'm glad I read it. Made me feel quite spoiled with my relatively easy lifestyle. ( )
  japaul22 | Jun 5, 2024 |
The Story of A Norwegian Immigrant Family in Dakota] as told by Aagot Raaen, a child of 5 when she arrived in the U.S. This is not your glossed-over Little House on the Prairie, but does depict the darker side of immigration settlement. (starvation, alcoholism, abuse) Most of the story takes place in North Dakota and depicts just how hard life was. A solid, no frills read. 272 pages ( )
  Tess_W | May 4, 2024 |
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This is an engaging, richly detailed biography of a family of Norwegian immigrant homesteaders in eastern North Dakota in the late 1800s. Educator and world traveler Aagot Raaen wrote this reminiscence late in her life. Like Giants in the Earth and Old Jules, Grass of the Earth deals frankly with a darker side of pioneer life on the prairie.

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