Growing Up Country Memories of an Iowa Farm Girl eBook Carol Bodensteiner


Growing Up Country Memories of an Iowa Farm Girl delivers a treat as delicious as oatmeal cookies hot out of the oven - a memoir of a happy childhood. In charming and memorable vignettes, Carol Bodensteiner captures rural life in middle America, in the middle of the 20th Century. Bodensteiner grew up on a family-owned dairy farm in the 1950s, a time when a family could make a good living on 180 acres. In these pages you can step back and relish a time simple but not easy, a time innocent yet challenging. If you grew up in rural America, these stories will trigger your memories and your senses, releasing a wealth of stories of your own. If the rural Midwest is foreign territory to you, Carol s stories will invite you into a fascinating and disappearing world.
Growing Up Country Memories of an Iowa Farm Girl eBook Carol Bodensteiner
The vignettes are authentic, heartwarming and inspiring. The author's voice is exactly that of a ten to twelve year old girl. She speaks as a child would and transports the reader back in time to her kitchen, barn, or field. Each adventure was a complete story, with a goal, tension, hoped for outcome and a lesson.I loved every one of the stories, except for the one about the cow with milk fever and the last one. But such is life, and the bad times are not papered over. I came to know Carol, her two sisters, two grandmothers, mom and dad, and her schoolmates and Mrs. Fowler almost as if they were my own neighbors. Carol, or Squirt, took me through her lessons, mischief, trials and accomplishments. My chest fill with pride when Squirt accomplished her goals, whether it was lifting a milk pail, or selling her radishes, and I felt keen disappointments at her setbacks, especially the 4H club, the bet, and the carny.
This book was so rich and filled adventures and historical information, I wouldn't be surprised if it were read in history classes. It went beyond farm life to the way people lived, interacted, hoped and feared during the pre-Sputnik times. Carol combined the voice of her childhood with her wiser adult voice looking back in a seamless manner. It's incredible how much detail she remembered from fifty years ago. What a wonderfully nostalgic view of life in time and place that no longer exists. Carol has done an excellent job of preserving it, much like her mother preserved vegetables, she preserved memories.
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Growing Up Country Memories of an Iowa Farm Girl eBook Carol Bodensteiner Reviews
This memoir of growing up on an Iowa farm (with two sisters and no brothers) in the 1950s is a treasure, especially since I also grew up on an Iowa farm (with one sister, no brothers) in the 1950s. Dad never wanted chickens around and didn't have dairy cows, so I learned a lot about the dailiness of dealing with both. My sister and I were also in 4-H, so I could relate to preparing demonstrations and projects to take to the county fair. A family working together like they did to keep a small farm running and economically viable is a disappearing way of life. "Growing Up Country" is a wonderful way to keep those day alive.
Like most people, I grew up with certain TV shows engrained in my memory. One of those that still stirs a warm, fuzzy glow of nostalgia is The Waltons… the close-knit community, the simple pleasures, the hard manual work and the sometimes bucolic ease. I wanted to live on Walton’s Mountain and I hankered after a porch with a swing seat where I could sip on a cool homemade lemonade just the way the Walton family did.
I never did get that porch with the swing seat but, now, thanks to Carol Bodenstiener, I can get to have that warm, fuzzy feeling all over again. Her book, Growing Up Country Memories of an Iowa Farm Girl, is the closest thing I think I’ll get to that Walton experience. Bodensteiner’s beautifully written book recounts her life growing up with her sisters and parents on an Iowa dairy farm in the Sixties and Seventies. It is a life that is certainly seen through rose-tinted glasses, but it is all the better for that because Bodensteiner captures it perfectly.
This is a charming book, full of great descriptive writing in a series of short stories that encapsulate life in those times. Life in the Bodensteiner childhood wasn’t short of chores – from killing and plucking chickens to bringing in the hay or milking the cows. However, it was also a life filled with love – both for the work itself and for those doing it.
A good author, I feel, is one who can make passages seem economic and effortless. Bodensteiner achieves this with aplomb. She is a very gifted writer and one who can put you in a scene immediately.
My stomach rumbled and my nose twitched as I practically tasted the homemade pies and smelled the fried chicken as it cooked in her childhood home. I’m a city boy and don’t know one end of a cow from the other but such is the skill of Bodensteiner’s descriptive writing that I think I could have set up my own milking parlour by the end of this book.
If you want to escape the pressures of your daily life and get away from the rat race, this is a must-read book. You will feel all the better at the end of it and will lament its passing almost as much as you will regret the fact that you never got to taste some of that Iowa farm home cooking.
Growing up Countrymemories of an Iowa Farm Girl by Carol Bodensteiner
What I like about this book are the stories each chpater holds. Everything about daily life on the farm and how to do things, with your hands back then.
How to grow, harvest and preserve garden food along with food from hunting and fishing. So many different methods that are lost to us today using appliances and electricity.
Reminds me so much of our family farm next door where the cows where and watching the machinery as the milk was pasturized-never knew there were that many thngs in place to be sure it was free from bacteria.
Husband also grew up and would visit his grandparents house in Ohio where they raised show pigs and hogs and had a manager for the farm. Still asking him questions as they arise while reading the book to hear how different things were from RI to OH.
Reader discussion guide also included Some pictures throughout the book.
The vignettes are authentic, heartwarming and inspiring. The author's voice is exactly that of a ten to twelve year old girl. She speaks as a child would and transports the reader back in time to her kitchen, barn, or field. Each adventure was a complete story, with a goal, tension, hoped for outcome and a lesson.
I loved every one of the stories, except for the one about the cow with milk fever and the last one. But such is life, and the bad times are not papered over. I came to know Carol, her two sisters, two grandmothers, mom and dad, and her schoolmates and Mrs. Fowler almost as if they were my own neighbors. Carol, or Squirt, took me through her lessons, mischief, trials and accomplishments. My chest fill with pride when Squirt accomplished her goals, whether it was lifting a milk pail, or selling her radishes, and I felt keen disappointments at her setbacks, especially the 4H club, the bet, and the carny.
This book was so rich and filled adventures and historical information, I wouldn't be surprised if it were read in history classes. It went beyond farm life to the way people lived, interacted, hoped and feared during the pre-Sputnik times. Carol combined the voice of her childhood with her wiser adult voice looking back in a seamless manner. It's incredible how much detail she remembered from fifty years ago. What a wonderfully nostalgic view of life in time and place that no longer exists. Carol has done an excellent job of preserving it, much like her mother preserved vegetables, she preserved memories.

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