On the Way Home is the diary of an American farm wife, Laura Ingalls Wilder, during her 1894 migration with her husband Almanzo Wilder and their seven-year-old daughter, Rose, from De Smet, South Dakota, to Mansfield, Missouri, where they settled permanently.[1][2]

On the Way Home
Front dustjacket, first edition
AuthorLaura Ingalls Wilder
CountryUnited States
SubjectFamily migration, frontier life
GenreDiary, children's literature[1]
PublisherHarper & Row
Publication date
November 12, 1962[2]
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages101 pp.
OCLC317883683
LC ClassF598 .W54[1]
Preceded byThe First Four Years (fiction) 
Followed byWest From Home 

It provides a detailed, daily description of the family's migration and includes commentary by Rose ("a setting by Rose Wilder Lane").[1] It was published in 1962, after Laura's death, by Harper & Bros., who had published her Little House series of novels. It is sometimes considered part of the series, which is narrowly a series of eight autobiographical children's novels based on Wilder's life from about 1870 to 1894 in South Dakota, ages about three to 27.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d On the way home; the diary of a trip from South Dakota to Mansfield, …. Harper & Row. 1962. Retrieved September 17, 2015 – via Library of Congress Online Catalog.
  2. ^ a b "On the Way Home: The Diary of a Trip from South Dakota to Mansfield, Missouri, in 1894". Kirkus Reviews. November 1, 1962. Retrieved October 2, 2015.