1 00:00:01,520 --> 00:00:05,640 Speaker 1: She's a Hollywood Western. She's Jack Kerouac, but in a 2 00:00:05,680 --> 00:00:06,720 Speaker 1: n ap dress with braids. 3 00:00:07,480 --> 00:00:13,120 Speaker 2: She is one of the most important American children's authors 4 00:00:13,520 --> 00:00:14,960 Speaker 2: of the twentieth century. 5 00:00:15,360 --> 00:00:18,720 Speaker 1: She's the basis for a television show still watched around 6 00:00:18,720 --> 00:00:21,680 Speaker 1: the world. I literally wake up in the middle of 7 00:00:21,720 --> 00:00:25,160 Speaker 1: the night and go, somebody somewhere is watching Little as 8 00:00:25,239 --> 00:00:25,599 Speaker 1: the Brow. 9 00:00:25,880 --> 00:00:27,560 Speaker 2: Women will come up to me, cry and saying, my 10 00:00:27,640 --> 00:00:30,120 Speaker 2: childhood was miserable. In Little House in the Prairie was 11 00:00:30,160 --> 00:00:30,760 Speaker 2: my escape. 12 00:00:30,880 --> 00:00:35,159 Speaker 1: She's been called a hero, a racist, a feminist, and 13 00:00:35,240 --> 00:00:36,159 Speaker 1: a propagandist. 14 00:00:36,640 --> 00:00:40,640 Speaker 3: Consider a Native child in their classroom reading it aloud, 15 00:00:40,680 --> 00:00:43,440 Speaker 3: and they come to that sentence, the only good Indian 16 00:00:43,560 --> 00:00:44,400 Speaker 3: is a dead Indian. 17 00:00:46,159 --> 00:00:49,760 Speaker 1: She is Laura Ingles Wilder. Did you know she was 18 00:00:49,760 --> 00:00:54,560 Speaker 1: a real person. In the nineteen thirties, Laura Ingles Wylder 19 00:00:54,600 --> 00:00:57,200 Speaker 1: wrote the nine Little House on the Prairie books based 20 00:00:57,200 --> 00:01:00,840 Speaker 1: on her childhood on the American Frontier Way or another. 21 00:01:01,080 --> 00:01:03,760 Speaker 1: She's been with us ever since. Oh I love I 22 00:01:03,840 --> 00:01:04,240 Speaker 1: loved that. 23 00:01:04,480 --> 00:01:06,279 Speaker 2: I loved Little House on the Prairie. 24 00:01:06,480 --> 00:01:09,440 Speaker 1: It's just a perfect book. I've loved Laura for as 25 00:01:09,480 --> 00:01:12,600 Speaker 1: long as I can remember. As a kid, I used 26 00:01:12,600 --> 00:01:15,640 Speaker 1: to map out her travels on my parents Atlas, and 27 00:01:15,680 --> 00:01:19,560 Speaker 1: I'm not alone. Every summer, thousands of people from around 28 00:01:19,560 --> 00:01:23,640 Speaker 1: the world pilgrimage to her little houses in tiny towns 29 00:01:23,880 --> 00:01:29,880 Speaker 1: from the middle of the country. Now I'm going too. 30 00:01:30,280 --> 00:01:32,800 Speaker 1: We're literally on the prairie. I went in search of Laura, 31 00:01:33,880 --> 00:01:37,360 Speaker 1: the real Laura. Who is this person I love so much? 32 00:01:38,400 --> 00:01:41,560 Speaker 1: Should I love her? The story of Laura is just 33 00:01:41,600 --> 00:01:45,319 Speaker 1: as complicated as the story of America, because she is 34 00:01:45,400 --> 00:01:48,000 Speaker 1: America for better and worse. 35 00:01:48,760 --> 00:01:53,400 Speaker 2: So if we pretend the past was not as controversial 36 00:01:53,480 --> 00:01:57,360 Speaker 2: and difficult and racist as it was, then how are 37 00:01:57,400 --> 00:01:59,800 Speaker 2: we going to deal with the racist issues were grappling 38 00:01:59,840 --> 00:02:01,120 Speaker 2: with today in. 39 00:02:01,080 --> 00:02:03,760 Speaker 1: A country currently at odds with itself and its history. 40 00:02:04,080 --> 00:02:07,280 Speaker 1: Could there be a better time for this exploration? There's 41 00:02:07,360 --> 00:02:10,720 Speaker 1: never been a better time than now. I'm Glennys McNichol, 42 00:02:11,040 --> 00:02:16,840 Speaker 1: and this is Wilder. Listen to Wilder on the iHeartRadio app, 43 00:02:16,919 --> 00:02:20,000 Speaker 1: Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.