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Bezig met laden... Prairie boy: An artist tells of his growing-up days on the Canadian prairiesdoor Harry J Baerg
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![]() Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. Prairie boy transports you back across the years to the "old days" of grandfather – – to the days when the Model–T Ford dominated the roads when the potbellied stove was often the only "central heating" in the house, when a team of good horses brought almost as much status as a Cadillac brings today, and when, for many a questing youth, a radio was a crystal, a "cat's whisker," and a pair of headphones. In these pages, Seventh-day Adventist artists–author Harry Baerg relates, with seemingly total recall, his boyhood years on the Canadian prairies. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
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![]() GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)971.24History and Geography North America Canada Prairie Provinces, Western Canada SaskatchewanLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:![]()
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Beginning with purchase of his family’s farm outside the town of Waldheim in 1917 when he was 8, Baerg writes about many features of life over the next 9 years until his family left for British Columbia. As an avid nature writer, Baerg’s descriptions of the wildlife around his farm and his family’s farm animals are very well done as well as chores surrounding the latter. His descriptive illustrations, in both words and images, of various activities brought to life how farmers a century ago dealt with daily life without the technological developments that would occur over the course of the rest of the century. Baerg spends time on both his schooling and how modern inventions slowly started coming into town and into their family’s life, making one realize that even the faintest resemblance to our world today was barely visible a century ago.
Coming in under 130 pages, Prairie Boy is a very quick read but very informative and entertaining. Although intended for a young adult audience, Harry Baerg’s autobiography of his time growing up is something adults looking for an relaxing read would find interesting. (