There was no Carrie Ingalls Wilder but, Carrie Ingalls did not write any books. Laura's daughter Rose Wilder Lane wrote one, the name of it is On the Way Home.
According to the television series, her family influenced her to write books.
Her daughter Rose influenced her to write them when she was sixty years old.
She wrote about her whole life.Her daughter inspierd her to.People are still reading her books today!:-)
Laura Ingalls Wilder did not write about her personal feelings on slavery in her books. However, she did provide a historical account of the time period in which she lived, which included slavery in some regions of the United States.
Laura Ingalls Wilder did not have formal training as a writer. She drew inspiration from her own life experiences growing up on the American frontier to write the "Little House" series. Despite receiving feedback and guidance from her daughter, Rose Wilder Lane, Laura's storytelling prowess was largely shaped by her personal observations and memories.
I believe it was the Missouri Ruralist
Laure wrote the draft of all of her books in lined, orange school tablets she bought at the local grocery store.
I think not. Laura did not write a book about Carrie having children. Carrie might have had some, or just one. But I think Carrie knew Laura had a baby, and Carrie wanted to do the same. THat's what I think. Carrie married a widower who already had children from before his first wife had died. Carrie became a mother to these children and raised them as her own. However she never gave birth to any children herself. Comment: But then again, she didn't write about her daughter's little boy.
She actually didn't because she thought no one would want to read them but when her daughter Rose was a young woman, she begged Laura to write the books
Laura Ingalls Wilder passed away in 1957, so she would not be alive in 2010.
Laura Ingalls Wilder started writing her first book in 1927 and finished her last book in 1943. They were all written from her desk at Rocky Ridge Farm, Mansfield, Missouri. Her desk can still be seen today as she left it.
Rose Wilder Lane did not hate her mother, Laura Ingalls Wilder. They had a complex relationship with disagreements, but they also shared a strong bond. Rose played a critical role in helping her mother write the "Little House on the Prairie" books.