Endings and Beginnings

I have not posted here since last August. I just re-read what I wrote then. It was an upbeat description of my activities last summer and my plans for fall. Since then, my life has been turned upside down.

At the same time that I was writing that blog post, Trinity Christian College, where I work, was careening towards crisis. New student enrollment for the fall semester was down sharply. Like many small, private colleges, Trinity had a not insignificant amount of debt. In the middle of August, the President announced he was leaving. In the middle of September, the Vice President of Academic Affairs also left. I become an Associate Vice President of Academic Affairs while keeping my roles as Dean of Faculty and Professor of History. Cost-savings plans were implemented. Uncertainty about the future of the institution reached a fever pitch by the middle of the semester. At the beginning of November, Trinity’s Board of Trustees voted to close the school in May 2026.

During November and December, the Trinity community worked came to grips with this new reality. It was much like grieving the death of a family member, except that normally when someone’s family member dies, coworkers tell them to take some time off and come back when they’re ready. This was a death that affected everyone at the same time, no one could take time off, and everyone’s work became harder. Faculty and staff members also suddenly had to spend hours every evening pursuing new employment. The emotional toll was great. The loss was also different for different people – for students, for staff members, for faculty members, for alumni, and for members of surrounding communities. Individuals worked through the stages of grief in different ways and at different rates. I attempted to serve the community in my new role even as I was applying for positions at other colleges and universities.

Because the decision to close in May was made by the Board in November, our students were put in an excellent position to explore their options moving forward. Multiple institutions offered to be teach-out schools; they promised that Trinity students could finish their degree in the same amount of time and with the same amount of financial aid. Making that decision in the fall, however, also meant that students could transfer in January, which would further endanger Trinity’s financial position. Faculty members, staff members, and administrators worked to encourage students to return for their final semester at Trinity. We learned in January that we had met our goal of having 85% of eligible students continue in the spring.

This semester, the experience of working at an institution that is closing has felt less like dealing with a death and more like caring for a family member who is on hospice. There are good days and bad days. There are constant reminders of the coming loss. Faculty and staff members have been going for interviews at other institutions. Some have secured positions. Many have not.

I’m sorry for the weight of this post so far. Writing gives me an opportunity to process the events of the last six months. I am working at the desk in the upstairs back corner of Trinity’s library. This is where I started the project in January of 2016, and this is where I read many books and wrote most of my blog posts. For more than ten years, I have come here once a week so that I can work for several hours without being interrupted by visitors or phone calls.

My own personal and family situation is somewhat brighter. I applied for twenty-five jobs at other colleges and universities, some teaching positions and some administrative positions. I received many rejection letters, had seven zoom interviews, and did three on-campus interviews. At the beginning of February, I accepted an offer to be Professor of History and Humanities and the Chair of the Department of History, Political Science, and Sociology at Geneva College in Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. I begin work there in August. Geneva is my alma mater. I grew up about an hour away from the school. I met my wife Paula at Geneva. Our three sons have attended Geneva; our youngest will be graduating in May. So after living for twenty-nine years in the Midwest—six years in Iowa and twenty-three here in Chicagoland—I will be going home. I am incredibly thankful to God for His goodness.

Accepting a position has enabled me to concentrate on serving the needs of the Trinity community in as many ways as I can. There are now twelve teach-out schools for Trinity students, so underclassmen have a variety of options. Unfortunately, there are no teach-outs for faculty and staff members. I serve on the Faculty Development Committee, and we have done several workshops on the job search. I have worked to find openings at other schools that faculty members might apply for and have been reaching out to contacts with recommendations of Trinity faculty members. In addition, everything that we do this semester is “the last time that we do x,” so I’m both working to continue good traditions and to mark their end in a meaningful way. There will be a celebration of Trinity’s legacy the evening of May 7, the day before the last commencement service. There will also be a last reunion of History students, faculty members and alumni the afternoon of May 8, before commencement that evening.

At home, my wife and I have been working to prepare our house for sale. Weeks of painting and decluttering will climax this weekend when all of our children and our two grandchildren will be home for Easter. My sons will help me take metal to the recycling center and furniture to the thrift store. We have a pile of things for our children to sort through. We have made one trip to western PA to look at houses and will probably make another once our house is on the market, Lord-willing in the middle of April.

Obviously, these activities have meant that promotion of A Prairie Faith has been limited. I did participate in a panel of alumni authors and a book signing at Geneva College’s Homecoming at the end of last October. This month I received a royalty statement from Eerdmans and learned that the book has sold over 1400 copies in the two years since its release. Depending on what source you consult, something like 90% of books published sell fewer than 1000 copies (some say 96% of books sell fewer than 1k), so I feel very fortunate. To readers who have promoted the book to your family and friends: my deepest thanks.

This blog post feels like a bundle of endings. The school where I have taught for twenty-three years is closing. Trinity was founded in 1959, so it was in existence for sixty-six years, and I have worked here for a third of its history. My time in the Midwest is also ending.

The first entry on this blog was posted on January 4, 2016. At that point, my hope was to write an article about Laura Ingalls Widler’s faith, and that spring I set out to read one of the Little House books each week and blog about how it engaged faith, the church, and Christianity. The project spawned a book proposal that was accepted in 2017. It took me five years to complete the manuscript, which I submitted after a sabbatical in 2022. Revisions, editing, and indexing took another two years, and A Prairie Faith was released in February 2024. It has been reviewed positively by publications with both large and small circulations. It has won two awards. I did a number of appearances, both in-person and online, to promote the book in 2024 and 2025. Now it appears that all of this work is coming to an end. I will likely pursue a new research project once I have settled in at Geneva. It seems fitting if this is the end of this blog as well.

I’m not quite ready to completely close the door on this project, this blog, or the Faith of Laura Ingalls Wilder website. I may post again if I have Wilder-related news. This is the ninety-eighth post I have done. Perhaps I can get to one hundred. I’ve put links to some of the milestones of the project at the end.

Multiple times in the Little House books, and in Laura Ingalls Wilder’s life, the ending of an adventure in one location led to new hope in a new place. Some have noted that there are no accounts of a person dying in the Little House books – the only death of a character is that of Jack the bulldog at the beginning of By the Shores of Silver Lake. Confronting death and failure is always difficult, and broader American culture celebrates life and success. In some ways, the Little House books reject that emphasis by providing multiple examples of the Ingalls family facing failure head-on and remaining optimistic. I myself have seen glimpses of God’s goodness even in the broader loss of a future for Trinity. As Ma said, “there’s no great loss without some small gain.”

Thanks for going with me on this journey. I have been carried along by your emails and encouragement. Speaking of emails, in the future, you can reach me at johnjfry@proton.me.

Goodbye for now.

Links

Trinity Christian College

Trinity Legacy Celebration

Geneva College

Foreword Reviews INDIES Book of the Year Award

Ella Dickey Literacy Award

Christianity Today Review

Book Release Day

The Book – Includes a brief rundown of the road to publication

Launch – January 4, 2025

Back to School 2025

returning to Western Pennsylvania in October

Back to school time is upon us. Gas prices in my neighborhood have spiked to nearly $4 a gallon ahead of the Labor Day weekend. And classes at Trinity Christian College began on Monday. This semester I am teaching the first half of the United States history survey—U. S. History to 1860—for the first time since 2021. Back then it was a Monday-Wednesday-Friday course. Now it is a Monday-Thursday course, since Trinity reworked the weekly schedule to make room for Wellbeing Wednesdays as part of our Transformative Colleges Initiative. I have also flipped the classroom; I made 25 videos this summer and no longer lecture in class; we do activities and discuss primary sources. So far my students are doing great.

In July I recorded a podcast episode for the website Mere Orthodoxy. They have a new podcast titled “Christians Reading Classics.” The host is Dr. Nadya Williams, who is a classicist and has a book about the Greek and Roman Classics coming out late this year. The podcast has a little broader definition of “classic,” and she asked me to join her to talk about Little House on the Prairie, which was published 90 years ago in 1935. I had a great time discussing the book and Laura Ingalls Wilder’s life and faith with Nadya and Dr. LuElla D’Amico, a Professor of English and Gender Studies at the University of the Incarnate Word in San Antonio. The episode dropped several weeks ago and I have a link to the podcast at the end of this post.

This month I also found out that A Prairie Faith was reviewed in the academic journal Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture. The review came out in the September 2024 issue, which was published online in February 2025. The reviewer, Dr. Melinda Marchand, teaches history at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. The review provides an excellent summary of the book and my argument. The author was generous even as she pointed out particular contexts that readers of that journal would have been interested in the book addressing in more detail. The journal is behind a paywall, so I think the best way to find it online is to see if your local public or university library has access.

I will be returning to Western Pennsylvania in October to sign books at Geneva College’s Homecoming. The event will be in the West Reading Room of McCartney Library on Saturday, October 25, from 11:00 am to 1:00 pm. I graduated from Geneva thirty-four years ago, and I was a student worker in the library all four of the years I attended. Many thanks to Beckie Cottage and the Alumni and Advancement team at Geneva for making this possible.

I also just picked up a copy of Pamela Smith Hill’s Too Good to Be Altogether Lost: Rediscovering Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House Books. It came out this year from the University of Nebraska Press. It looks pretty fascinating. I will have to carve out some time in my schedule to read it this semester.

As always, if you’re interested in having me speak, please let me know (john.fry@trnty.edu). Thanks for reading!

Links

Trinity Christian College

Wellbeing Wednesdays

Transformative Colleges Initiative

Mere Orthodoxy

Christians Reading Classics

Nadya Williams

LuElla D’Amico

Church History, September 2024 issue at Cambridge Journals

Melinda Marchand

Geneva CollegeHomecoming 2025

Midsummer 2025

Summer is in full swing in Chicago. Last week it was in the 90s all week, and this week it’s been in the upper 80s and hasn’t rained. The grass at my house is getting brown; I’ve been watering my tomatoes every night.

In June I had the privilege of doing a radio interview to talk about A Prairie Faith on Ozarks radio station KHOZ (FM 94.9, AM 900) in Harrison, Arkansas. Dan Reynolds had stopped by my book table when I was at the Missouri Cherry Blossom Festival at the end of April. He and Ann Lemley host a show called “Around the Table” on KHOZ every mid-morning. We worked out that he would call me on the morning of June 10. I had a great time talking with Dan and Ann; I really appreciated their invitation.

Early in June I also learned that A Prairie Faith had been named a Bronze Award winner in the 2024 INDIES Book of the Year Awards for Biography from Foreword Reviews. Eerdmans had three books win awards from the Foreword website, which reviews and promotes books from small publishers and self-published authors. Here is their description of the INDIES Awards:

Whether you’re a librarian, a bookseller, or just a general lover of books, you know that independent presses and authors are publishing some of the most innovative, creative, and beautiful books. To honor the very best of indie publishing each year, we’re pleased to host the Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Awards!

Thousands of books are entered each year, and over 100 librarians and booksellers take part in the judging process, narrowing down a group of finalists in 55 categories to Gold, Silver, and Bronze winners that truly represent the best in independent publishing.

My deepest thanks to the folks at Eerdmans who nominated the book and the judges at Forward who named it a finalist and then gave it the award!

Later this month, on July 18, I will be recording a podcast for the website Mere Orthodoxy about the 90th anniversary of the publication of Little House on the Prairie. Many thanks to Nadya Williams for that invitation.

Finally, I am very sad to not be able to attend LauraPalooza 2025 in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, next week. I will be traveling east for a family reunion in New Jersey at the end of this week and could not figure out how to make the trip west at the same time. I hope that all who are heading to Sioux Falls and De Smet have safe travels and a great time of gathering and sharing. Thanks to Rachel Luther and everyone at the Laura Ingalls Wilder Legacy and Research Association (LIWLRA) for their work putting that event together.

As always, if you’re interested in having me speak, please let me know (john.fry@trnty.edu). Thanks for reading!

Links

Around the Table with Dan and Ann

2024 Foreword INDIES Awards for Biography

Foreword INDIES Awards

Foreword’s Listing for my book

Mere Orthodoxy

LauraPalooza 2025

The Laura Ingalls Wilder Legacy and Research Association (LIWLRA)

Iowa and Missouri

two book events in April

Photo by Michelle Underwood

Summer has arrived in Chicagoland. Finals week at Trinity was the last week of April and Commencement was May 2. May 15 was the last day for faculty members on nine-month contracts. As June approaches, I’m in fewer meetings. I’ve begun thinking about the two history courses I will be teaching in the fall: History 204, the first half of the American History survey, and History 401, the Senior Seminar.

I enjoyed two book events in April. The first was an online Iowa History 101 event sponsored by the State Historical Society of Iowa (SHSI) on April 10 at noon. The zoom session was attended by about a dozen people. My talk addressed what we know about Laura’s faith and about Laura and Rose’s contributions to the Little House books, particularly as they address Christianity and the church. I also discussed the Ingalls’s family’s one-year stay in Burr Oak, Iowa, in 1876 and 1877. There were some great questions at the end. The session was recorded and a link is at the end of this post.

Then I was able to travel to the Missouri Cherry Blossom Festival in Marshfield, Missouri. I was there on Friday, April 25 and Saturday, April 26. The mornings and early afternoons of both days I was able to sell and sign books (I took copies of both A Prairie Faith and my second book, Almost Pioneers) in Marshfield’s Community Center, along with a number of movie and television stars from the mid to late twentieth century. Nine actors were there from “Little House on the Prairie,” including Dean Butler, who played Almanzo, and Alison Arngrim, who played Nellie Oleson. There were also three actors from “The Waltons,” and others from “Leave it to Beaver,” “Dallas,” “Barney Miller,” It’s a Wonderful Life, and a variety of other shows and movies. Michelle Underwood, a southwest Missouri author who also works at the Laura Ingalls Wilder Home in Mansfield, had a table next to mine. She has written a book giving a “behind the scenes” look at the Wilder Home. We enjoyed talking while we worked to attract the crowds who waited in line to get autographs from the “Little House on the Prairie” stars. I ultimately sold about twenty books.

On Friday afternoon I went to the Marshfield Assembly of God church to receive the Ella Dickey Literacy Award. Bill Anderson presented me with the award. The other awardees were the Rev. John Marshall, a retired Baptist Pastor who has written a book on the faith of Abraham Lincoln, and Paul Landis, a Secret Service Agent for John F. Kennedy who has written a memoir about his experiences. I was honored to receive the award, which is named after a beloved, long-time librarian in Marshfield.

John Marshall, me, and Paul Landis. Photo by Sarah Manley

Later Friday afternoon, I attended the Dred Scott Reconcilation Forum, hosted by Lynne Jackson, a descendant of Dred and Harriet Scott. She interviewed Dr. Bryan Moore, the pastor of Jubilee Community Church in north St. Louis and a distant relative of Nat Turner. I also got to judge a cherry pie contest. On Saturday morning, I attended Rev. Marshall’s session about Lincoln; his comments were very insightful. It was great to catch up with Bill Anderson and Sarah Manley. Many thanks to Sarah for taking the pictures during the ceremony. Many thanks also to Rev. Nicholas Inman, Director of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Home in Mansfield and the driving force behind the Festival, for his gracious invitation.

Now I’m just waiting to hear the announcement of the Book of the Year for Biography from the website Foreword. A Prairie Faith is one of eight finalists. Lord-willing that will be announced in June.

If you’re interested in having me speak, please let me know (john.fry@trnty.edu). Thanks for reading!

Links:

Trinity Christian College

Iowa History 101 Recording

STL listing of events at Missouri Cherry Blossom Festival

My second book: Almost Pioneers: One Couple’s Homesteading Adventure in the West

Michelle Underwood’s website

Michelle’s Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Rocky Ridge Farm: A Detailed Look Behind the Scenes

Bill Anderson’s website

Paul Landis’s The Final Witness: A Kennedy Secret Service Agent Breaks His Silence After 60 Years

John Marshall’s Lincoln and Christianity: Essays on Lincoln’s Religious Life

The Laura Ingalls Wilder Home and Museum in Mansfield

Foreword Book of the Year Finalist Announcement

List of Foreword Book of the Year (INDIES) Finalists for Biography

Foreword’s Listing for my book

Picture of Bill Anderson giving John Fry the Ella Dickey Literacy award.

Bill Anderson presenting me with the Ella Dickey Literacy Award. Photo by Sarah Manley

More Responses

two reviews, a nomination, and two upcoming events

Greetings and welcome to the end of March. This month we’ve had fake spring here in Chicagoland—several beautiful, 70-degree days—but now we’re back to late winter: some snow, some sun, some cold rain, temperatures in the 40s.

Two more reviews of A Prairie Faith have appeared in the last several months. One was in the February issue of New Horizons, the monthly magazine of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church (OPC). This is the conservative Presbyterian denomination that I have been a member of for most of my life. Reviewer Hannah Schmidt notes that Wilder’s rejection of predestination and strict Sabbatarianism meant that “Most likely Wilder would not have sought out an OPC church.” Schmidt also has encouraging words about my work piecing together Wilder’s and Rose’s ideas from their writings. I appreciate both her kind words and her challenges. I’m also grateful to the New Horizons staff for publishing them.

The other review is in the Winter 2024 Issue of Magistra: A Journal of Women’s Spirituality in History. That journal is published by a group of Roman Catholic women interested in “the spirituality of women in all time periods and all religious traditions.” Reviewer Sheryl A. Kujawa-Holbrook ably summarizes the major findings of the book. I am thankful for her careful reading.

The book has also been named a 2024 Finalist for Book of the Year for Biography in a contest sponsored by the website Foreword. Foreword promotes the books of independent authors and small publishers. They affectionately call their awards the INDIES. There are seven other finalists for the Biography category, including biographies of Western Explorer John C. Fremont, Notre Dame football coach Ara Parseghian, and Pem Dorjee Sherpa, who climbed Mount Everest. The winners of the award will be announced in June.

Finally, it was exciting to be invited to the Missouri Cherry Blossom Festival at the end of April to receive their Ella Dickey Literacy Award. The Festival is held in Marshfield, Missouri, about thirty minutes northwest of Mansfield, where Laura and Almanzo lived, and about thirty minutes northeast of regional metropolis Springfield. The Festival features a forum with descendants of Dred Scott and Nat Turner, and it also has events that showcase cast members from Little House on the Prairie, The Waltons, and Leave it to Beaver. To top it all off, Bill Anderson will be there to present me with the award! The event runs from Thursday, April 24 to Sunday, April 27.

Just a reminder that before that, I will be speaking at an online Iowa History 101 event sponsored by the State Historical Society of Iowa (SHSI) on Thursday, April 10 at noon central time. I would love to see you in the zoom and chat! The link to register for my talk is below.

If you’re interested in having me speak, please let me know (john.fry@trnty.edu). Thanks again for your all your support!

Links

The Orthodox Presbyterian Church

New Horizons February 2025 issue (click Download PDF or EPub) – The review is on pages 21 and 22; or you can use this direct link to the PDF

Magistra: A Journal of Women’s Spirituality in History – I think that to get the Winter 2024 issue (Volume 30, number 2), you will have to contact the editor, Sister Judith Sutera, OSB.

Foreword

Foreword 2024 Book of the Year (INDIES) Finalists Announcement

Foreword Book of the Year (INDIES) Finalists for Biography

Foreword’s Listing for A Prairie Faith

Missouri Cherry Blossom Festival – the best rundown on events I’ve found. You can also google their Facebook and Eventbright pages.

Iowa History 101 and my upcoming talk on April 10 (includes registration)

A New Year (2025)

Christianity Today published a review

Image courtesy of Christianity Today

Happy 2025. It was nine years ago this month that I started this project (and this blog). And it’s past time for an update on several developments with the reception of the book since the middle of last November.

On November 20, 2024, the magazine Christianity Today published a review of A Prairie Faith. It was written by Monika B. Hilder, a professor of English at Trinity Western University in Langley, British Columbia, Canada. (The school has no connection with Trinity Christian College where I teach.) She has written multiple books and articles about C. S. Lewis and his works, and apparently she has long appreciated the Little House books. Titled “The Quiet Faith Behind Little House on the Prairie,” the review was overwhelmingly positive. I think that Dr. Hilder really understood a lot of what I was trying to do in the book, and for that I am very thankful. A friend of mine asked me if the book got a bump in sales as a result of the review; according to Wikipedia, Christianity Today has a circulation of over 100,000 in print and over 2 million digital subscribers. He told me to check my Amazon best sellers rank. Sure enough, for a week or two, the book was under #50,000. It’s back over #500,000 now. I’ll find out how sales are going when I get a royalty report later this spring.

I also discovered that the book has been reviewed in the Annals of Iowa. It is in the volume 83, number 3, summer 2024 issue. Sarah Uthoff, an Iowa librarian and a good friend wrote it. Sarah’s Trundlebed Tales website is a multi-media collection of materials about “Laura Ingalls Wilder, one-room schools, historic foodways, and living history.” This review was also quite positive, and I appreciate her careful reading and her kind words. I have written book reviews for the Annals in the past, so it was great to see my book reviewed in it.

Iowa will also be the site of my next speaking engagement—online Iowa. I will be speaking at an Iowa History 101 event on April 10 at noon. Iowa History 101 is a zoom meeting which was started by the State Historical Society of Iowa (SHSI) during covid and which has continued ever since. The twice-monthly meetings address all kinds of different Iowa history topics. I will be talking about Laura’s faith and also doing a quick dive into the Ingalls family’s brief sojourn in Burr Oak, Iowa, in late 1876 and early 1877. There are some great stories about their time there in Pioneer Girl, but she left it completely out of the Little House books. I would love to see you in the zoom and chat! The link to register for my talk is below.

This is the end of week four of Trinity’s spring semester (we started the Monday after New Year’s Day), and my classes are going well so far. I am teaching a Thinking and Writing course about Communities and a Foundations Course about vocation. It was bitter cold in Chicago last week, but today it is in the thirties (and raining).

If you’re interested in having me speak, please let me know (john.fry@trnty.edu). Thanks again for your all your support!

Links

Christianity Today Review – this is normally behind a paywall, but you may be able to read the entire review if you don’t go there often; I think they’ll let you read a couple pieces before asking you to subscribe.

Monika B. Hilder’s page at Trinity Western University

The Annals of Iowa

Annals Volume 83, Number 3, Summer 2024 – If your local library doesn’t have a copy, I think that you can order one from the State Historical Society of Iowa.

Trundlebed Tales

Iowa History 101 and my upcoming talk on April 10 (includes registration)

Trinity Christian College

Late Fall 2024

almost a thousand copies

So it’s half-way through the month of November. Thanksgiving is late this year, so after that Trinity only has one week of classes before finals. Students in my Senior Seminar course read A Prairie Faith earlier this semester. It was a real treat; I wrote it for readers like them. They are now finishing paper drafts based on their own research projects. Students in my first-year course are working their way through a historical monograph on the use of the atomic bomb during World War II. I’ve also begun preparing to teach two new courses in the spring.

A Prairie Faith has been available for ten months. I recently received my first royalty statement from Eerdmans. Almost a thousand copies were sold between February and the end of June. That number is more than my first book sold in twenty years. My deepest thanks to all those who purchased a book for themselves and/or for someone else. I believe that the book also makes an excellent Christmas gift.

About a month ago, on an October Saturday, I was able to do a book signing at the Barnes & Noble store in Orland Park, Illinois. It was a new experience to have to attract people’s attention. All my previous events were either connected with Laura Ingalls Wilder or were talks where people came particularly to hear about Wilder’s life and faith. Even though the table they gave me was close to the entrance to the store, I found that I had to say something to everyone who entered in the hope that some would come over. Fortunately, Eerdmans had made me bookmarks, so I offered people a bookmark and then made a quick pitch if someone accepted one (“It’s a biography of the author of Little House on the Prairie”). I saw two Trinity graduates who had me as their history teacher, and I met a high school student who is hoping to become an author. The store had bought twenty-five books and I ended up selling eight of them. I signed the rest and said that I would advertise on my social media that signed copies are available at the store in Orland Park Place. Many thanks to Val Martinez for setting things up for me.

Thanks again for your all your support!

Links:

Trinity Christian College

Book Signing

Barnes & Noble, Orland Park Place, Orland Park, Illinois

Book Tour – Fall 2024

Missouri!

In the gift shop at the Laura Ingalls Wilder Home and Museum, Mansfield

Last week I was able to travel to Missouri for several engagements. On Wednesday, September 25, I from Chicagoland to Branson and stayed overnight there. The next day I drove to the College of the Ozarks (they call it the C of O), which is just south of Branson. There, Dr. Aleshia O’Neal gave me a wonderful tour of the campus before I spoke in her class. Dr. O’Neal is an English Professor at the C of O who grew up on a farm in Missouri. So we enjoyed looking at all the tractors and barbed wire in the college’s tractor museum.  We also went to Patriot’s Park, Williams Memorial Chapel, and the scripture garden that overlooks the White River. The C of O is a work college, meaning there is no tuition, but all students work fifteen hours a week on campus or in the local community. I did not realize how many different on-campus business operations this would require. We visited the stained glass studio and grist mill, and I saw the greenhouses and barns for the cows. We finished at the Ralph Foster Museum, which has artifacts from all periods of Ozarks history. I then spoke about my research on Mrs. Wilder in English 3023, the American Novel, to eight students and several faculty members. The English Department treated me to lunch at the C of O’s Keeter Center, which features an excellent restaurant, as well as a hotel and conference center. Many thanks to Dr. O’Neal and to Dr. Ethan Smilie, Humanities Division Chair, for their invitation and hospitality. I met Dr. Smilie at LauraPalooza in 2017, and we’ve corresponded ever since.

Me with Dr. Ethan Smilie and Dr. Aleshia O’Neal

That afternoon I drove from the Keeter Center to West Plains, a town of about 12,000 people in south-central Missouri.  I spoke at the West Plains Public Library at 5:00. There were about thirty people there, including a woman who was originally born in the south suburbs of Chicago. There were also several families from Covenant Reformed Church, which is a congregation in my Presbytery. That night I stayed with a family from that church and really enjoyed my time with them and their daughter and three sons. They reminded me of my family about 20 years ago. Many thanks to Greg Carter and Dianna Locke for hosting me at the Library, and to the Nortons for their hospitality.

West Plains Public Library

On Friday, September 27, I drove from West Plains to Mansfield for the 49th Annual Wilder Days celebration.  I went by way of Ava, which is a town that Laura and Almanzo Wilder often visited on Sunday afternoons, but which I had never been to. This got me off the four-lane highway, which meant I saw some really beautiful views of the Ozarks. Certain areas really reminded me of Western Pennsylvania, where I grew up. Once I got to Mansfield, I went to the Laura Ingalls Wilder Home and Museum outside of town and reacquainted myself with the site.  I walked through the farmhouse, over the path to the rock house, and through the rock house—tours were self-guided because of Wilder Days. I also went through the museum and saw that my book was for sale in the middle of a bookcase of works about Mrs. Wilder.  There now is also a recreation of Almanzo’s garage, just opened this year. I also visited the Mansfield Area Historical Museum in downtown Mansfield.  It is housed in a replica train station and has a variety of artifacts from local history, including materials about Carl Mays, who played major league baseball fifteen years for the Red Sox, Yankees, and Reds. I also got to see the Mansfield public school fourth graders sing in the square. They did great.

Friday evening, I went to the Fifth Annual Wilder Dinner, a fundraising event for the Laura Ingalls Wilder Home and Museum. It was held at the Mansfield High School. Before the prayer, a local musician played two songs on Pa’s Fiddle, the violin that belonged to Charles Ingalls. It gave me chills to hear the instrument that Laura wrote so much about. After dinner, there was a live auction of a variety of pieces of Wilder memorabilia. Dean Butler also spoke; he played Almanzo in the TV series “Little House on the Prairie” from 1979 to 1983. I had previously heard him speak at LauraPalooza in 2022. Friday night, I was able to stay at a house owned by the Wilder Home.

David Wilson playing Pa’s Fiddle

Saturday morning, I was able to hear Pa’s Fiddle again, this time for forty-five minutes, in front of the Wilder Home. I then signed books in the entryway to the museum from 10 am to noon. Dean Butler was signing copies of his new book, Prairie Man in the back of the museum. The line for him wound through the museum, out the front door, down the steps, and along the parking lot. At lunch, I went downtown and bought a pie from the Historical Museum’s fundraiser and a bag of kettle corn. I also got to see the Mansfield Wilder Days Parade. I then went back to the museum and signed books from 2 to 4 pm. I then drove back to Chicagoland. Many thanks to Rev. Nicholas Inman, Director of the Wilder Home and Museum, and to staff members Susie, Vicki, Marie, Tana, Clinton, and everyone else who made my visit there excellent.

Up next for me is a book celebration at Trinity next Wednesday afternoon. There are four faculty members who have published books in the last twelve months. I will also be signing books at the Barnes & Noble in Orland Park, Illinois on Saturday, October 19 from 1 to 3 pm.  Anyone in Chicagoland is invited to attend!  (Put in link)

Thanks again for your support!

Links:

College of the Ozarks

What is a work College?

Gaetz Tractor Museum

Ralph Foster Museum

West Plains Public Library

Covenant Reformed Church

Laura Ingalls Wilder Historic Home and Museum

Mansfield Area Historical Society and Museum

Trinity Christian College

Book Signing at Barnes & Noble Orland Park, Illinois

Interviews and Reviews

I love invitations

Summer has passed quickly. Meetings ahead of the fall semester here at Trinity Christian College begin next week. I hope that everyone whose lives revolve around the academic calendar (professors, teachers, parents, students, etc.) have had a 1) restful and 2) productive summer, in whatever proportion you desired. All best for the new year.

In July I was able to record interviews for two more podcasts. One was for the Conference on Faith and History, an organization I have been a member of for over twenty-five years. I was interviewed by Lucy S. R. Austen, who has written the most recent biography of Elisabeth Elliot. I had a great time. I also recorded a shorter podcast with John Notgrass of Notgrass History, a publishing company for homeschool families. I greatly appreciate their support. Links are at the end of this post.

The book has also been reviewed at a number of online sites this year. I greatly appreciate the kind words from readers. Links are at the end of this page, and I’ve put some on the home page.

My trip to Missouri in September has been finalized. I will be meeting with the American Novel class at the College of the Ozarks on Thursday morning, September 26. I will then be speaking at West Plains Public Library that evening. On Friday and Saturday, September 27 and 28, I will be signing books during the Wilder Days celebration at the Laura Ingalls Wilder Historic Home and Museum in Mansfield.

As always, if you are interested in having me speak at your local bookstore, church, public library, or other community group, please contact me at john.fry@trnty.edu. I love invitations. You can also keep checking my page dedicated to Book Talks, both upcoming ones and previous ones. Thanks again for your support and encouragement!

Links:

Trinity Christian College

Conference on Faith and History Podcast

Notgrass History Podcast

Lucy S. R. Austen

Randi Baltzer, Librarian at Arizona Christian University

Cheryl C. Malandrinos’s Laura’s Little Houses

Dr. John Olds at Life is Story

Midwest Book Review – The Biography Shelf

Annette Whipple’s The Laura Ingalls Wilder Companion (the book giveway is over, unfortunately)

Kingsbury Journal, Kingsbury County, South Dakota (this one is behind a paywall, but in case there are readers who subscribe)

College of the Ozarks

West Plains Public Library

Laura Ingalls Wilder Historic Home and Museum

Book Tour – Summer 2024

Michigan!

The spring semester at Trinity Christian College wrapped up at the beginning of May. My summer involves work for my role as Dean of Faculty at Trinity and preparations for the 2024-2025 academic year. This fall, I am returning to teaching half-time and will be teaching first-year students for the first time since spring 2021. I have been talking with colleagues and making plans.

In addition, last week I was able to travel to Michigan for several speaking opportunities:

On Wednesday, May 29, I drove to Ann Arbor and spoke that afternoon at the Malletts Creek branch of the Ann Arbor District Library. There were seven in the audience in person and six on the livestream of the event. Many thanks to Sam Root for organizing things, to Lucy for hosting, and to James for taking care of all of the technology. (After the event, I was able to see my beloved Pittsburgh Pirates play the second game of a doubleheader with the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park.)

On Thursday and Friday, May 30 and 31, I attended the Midwestern History Conference (MHC) in the Eberhard Center at Grand Valley State University in Grand Rapids. It was the first time that I had been to the MHC since 2019. That was the year that Bill Anderson, John Miller, and I did a session on writing about Laura Ingalls Wilder. I also presented some of my early research on Wilder there in 2017. It was great to be back and to see some old friends. I chaired a session on Friday morning, and Friday afternoon I presented a paper about Wilder’s faith on a panel about Religion in the Midwest. Thanks to Patrick Allen Pospisek for organizing the conference and accepting my paper, to David Mislin for chairing my session, and to David Zwart for putting me up Thursday night and for being a good friend and colleague for so many years. It was also great to see Bill Anderson and Cindy Wilson.

Me, Cindy Wilson, and Bill Anderson Photo by Bill Anderson

Finally, on Thursday night I was able to give a book talk at Schuler Books in Grand Rapids. Schuler books is an enormous independent bookstore that also has locations in three other Michigan cities. About forty people came, including some former colleagues from Trinity who now live in western Michigan. The question and answer period was especially lively, and I also had a great time talking to people after signing books. Many thanks to Elizabeth Bosscher for taking care of arrangements, to Indigo for hosting and keeping things moving, and to Yudha Thianto for making me Indonesian food for dinner.

Schuler Books in Grand Rapids

I believe that the rest of the summer will be pretty quiet. I will be doing a zoom for the Conference on Faith and History in early July, which will become a podcast that I can post afterwards. I also have some hopes of speaking at some public libraries or bookstores in Chicago. Then in September I’ll be heading to Missouri for Wilder Days in Mansfield and Lord-willing several other events. If you are interested in having me speak at your local bookstore, church, public library, or other community group, please contact me at john.fry@trnty.edu.

You can also keep checking my page dedicated to Book Talks, both upcoming ones and previous ones. Thanks again for your support and encouragement!

Links:

Trinity Christian College

Ann Arbor ad

Midwestern History Conference – Includes a program you can download

Post on the 2017 MHC

Post on the 2019 MHC

Cindy Wilson’s Author Site

Bill Anderson’s Author Site

Schuler Books Ad

Conference on Faith and History Podcast Series

Wilder Days at the Laura Ingalls Wilder Historic Home and Museum in Mansfield