Able McLaughlins

Able McLaughlins

by Margaret Wilson

17 chapters8h 7mEnglish1923

About this book

The Able McLaughlins won the Pulitzer Prize for a novel in 1924 in Margaret Wilson's debut work. Aptly described as "Little House on the Prairie - but for adults" the novel follows a group of Scottish families who pioneer the Iowa prairie in the 1860’s. The main storyline concerns Wully, the eldest McLaughlin son, who returns home from the Civil War to find that his sweetheart, Chirstie, has experienced an unspeakable tragedy that will profoundly affect the couple's lives. Their story is one of shame and honor, secrets and guilt, fear and loathing, revenge and forgiveness. But perhaps the stars of the novel are the strong older women such as Wully’s mother, Isobel, whose love and matriarchal strength keeps the family together as well as Chirstie’s stepmother, Barbara, who finds ways to make her good-for-nothing husband keep his promises. Interlaced with the plots are richly detailed descriptions of frontier prairie life, the love that families share, and the relationships within the Scottish immigrant community. (Warren Kati)

Chapters (17)

1Section 1
1993
2Section 2
1829
3Section 3
1856
4Section 4
1909
5Section 5
2071
6Section 6
1396
7Section 7
1735
8Section 8
2071
9Section 9
1614
10Section 10
1657
11Section 11
1449
12Section 12
1850
13Section 13
1812
14Section 14
1976
15Section 15
1265
16Section 16
1075
17Section 17
1665

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