Finished Netflix's Little House on the Prairie Reboot? Here Are 10 Series to Binge Next For viewers who have already burned through Netflix's Little House on the Prairie, here are ten shows with the same downhome, frontier-era spirit, from Canadian orphan tales to a gritty Yellowstone prequel. Netflix's reimagining of Laura Ingalls Wilder's pioneer classic has turned into one of the platform's biggest hits of the year, even as some viewers have pushed back hard against changes the new version makes to certain characters and storylines from the original books. A second season is already in production, which is a rare vote of confidence from a streamer that usually waits for the numbers to settle for months before recommissioning anything. The original Melissa Gilbert and Michael Landon series wrapped up in 1984 after a run of television movies, but the Ingalls family never really left popular culture in all the years since: their story has resurfaced in live-action remakes, a stage musical, and even a Japanese anime adaptation across the decades that followed. None of those earlier attempts, though, reached anywhere near the scale of this new Netflix version. Anyone who has already finished the whole season and wants more of that same downhome, frontier-flavoured historical drama while waiting for season two has plenty of company to choose from in the meantime. Anne With an E (2017-2019) Anne With an E takes viewers back to Prince Edward Island, Canada, in 1896, where a pair of elderly, unmarried siblings send away for an orphan boy to help work their farm. What arrives instead is a girl: the endlessly talkative Anne Shirley, played by Amybeth McNulty, who has to fight to win over the couple who did not ask for her, while also proving herself to a town that is quick to judge her either as a useless girl or as a charity case living off others. The story itself is fiction, drawn from Lucy Maud Montgomery's novel Anne of Green Gables, the book that eventually spawned a long line of family-friendly adaptations, including a beloved 1970s television series of its own. What makes this newer version worth watching is how thoroughly it digs into the book's text and subtext for fresh material, all without ever losing the spirit of the original story. It streams on Netflix. Little Women Little Women arrives from almost exactly the period that the Ingalls family was leaving Wisconsin for the wider Midwest that Laura Ingalls Wilder would go on to write about. Louisa May Alcott was writing and publishing her own groundbreaking debut novel around that same era, a story set in a Civil War-era New England where the women have largely been left to fend for themselves while the men in their lives are away fighting. This BBC miniseries never quite got the attention that Greta Gerwig's excellent film adaptation received two years later, but it sticks closer to the original text without ever feeling stuffy or overly academic. Because Alcott's novel unfolds over a period of several years, the extended miniseries format captures the passage of time far better than a two-hour film realistically can, and that passage of time turns out to matter enormously to the story being told. Emily Watson brings just the right twinkle to the otherwise steady, dependable Marmee, while Angela Lansbury, in what turned out to be her very final television role, is note-perfect as the sharp-tongued, snide Aunt March. It streams on Peacock, Tubi and Netflix. The Other Bennet Sister The Other Bennet Sister takes a ratings-friendly BBC miniseries format and tells the story of Pride and Prejudice all over again, but this time from the point of view of Lizzy Bennet's bookish, far less glamorous younger sister. Mary's ruddy complexion, her insistence on grammatical correctness, and her spectacles all make her, by the rigid standards of her world, unsuitable for marriage and fit for little beyond a quiet, genteel spinsterhood. That situation begins to change once Mary strikes out on her own to become a governess for the Gardiner family in London, gradually building a life and a future for herself away from the parents and siblings who never really saw her as much more than a piece of furniture in the family home. Pemberley and its surrounding world are an ocean away from the rural setting of Little House, but both shows are ultimately built around clever, forthright young women determined to carve out a place for themselves against the odds. It streams on Britbox. All Creatures Great and Small (2020-present) All Creatures Great and Small is an update of a long-running British franchise, adapted from the autobiographical novels of writer James Alfred Wight, far better known by his pen name James Herriot. It sends viewers back to the rural Yorkshire Dales of the 1930s, following a young Scottish vet who moves to the small farming town of Darrowby to take up a job as a veterinary assistant. First among the local eccentrics he meets is Helen Alderson, played by Rachel Shenton, a practical and hard-working farmer facing some genuinely big decisions about the direction of her own life. Viewers do need to be prepared to see animals placed in some degree of danger from time to time, but the big-hearted show only rarely goes for a true emotional gut punch. Most of the time it plays out as warm, charming domestic drama set against a gorgeous, bucolic rural landscape, with baby cows making frequent guest appearances throughout. It streams on PBS, or it can be bought outright through Prime Video. Anne Shirley (anime) The anime series Anne Shirley returns once again to the world of Anne of Green Gables. Little House on the Prairie is fundamentally the story of an American family, while Lucy Maud Montgomery's novels follow a Canadian orphan who eventually finds a family of her own, but both stories are ultimately about smart, adventurous young women coming of age on a difficult, unforgiving rural frontier. This is not the first Japanese television adaptation of the Anne story, but its animation is genuinely beautiful throughout, and it stays faithful to the source material while still adding its own stylistic touches here and there, including a schoolhouse fight over a chalkboard that is briefly drawn as though it were a full battle sequence. It streams on Crunchyroll. Heartland Heartland is based on a popular series of books by Linda Chapman and Beth Chambers, who write together under the shared pen name Lauren Brooke. The show follows a family of horse ranchers in western Canada, led by two sisters, Amy and Lou, played respectively by Amber Marshall and Michelle Morgan. Even though the series is set in present-day western Alberta rather than in the nineteenth century, the frontier atmosphere and the ongoing family drama do not feel especially far removed from the world the Ingalls family once inhabited. New viewers do have a considerable amount of catching up to do here, since the show is coming up on its 20th season on air, an extraordinary run by any television standard. It streams on Netflix. 1883 1883 is the first of the Yellowstone spin-off series, and it fills in the backstory of the Dutton family several generations before the events of that flagship show. Tim McGraw and Faith Hill play the very first generation of Duttons to make the long journey from Texas to Montana, travelling on a genuinely dangerous wagon train led by Sam Elliott. It amounts to a much grittier take on westward expansion than anything found in Little House, without nearly the same family-friendly tone throughout, but it still places Isabel May's 17-year-old Elsa Dutton right at the emotional centre of the whole story. She begins the series as an adventurous, spirited young woman and is gradually hardened by everything she goes on to experience along the way. It streams on Paramount+. Lark Rise to Candleford (2008-2011) Lark Rise to Candleford is set an entire ocean away from the American frontier of the Ingalls family, but it follows a strikingly similar basic shape: a young woman coming of age in the 19th century, in a story drawn from the semi-autobiographical novels of writer Flora Thompson. Country girl Laura Timmins, played by Olivia Hallinan, leaves her home village to look for work in the wealthier, somewhat more metropolitan neighbouring town of Candleford. She lands a job at the local post office, where she is taken under the wing of her own mother's cousin, Dorcas, played by Julia Sawalha. Not everyone living in Candleford turns out to be welcoming toward a newcomer from the countryside, and matters only get harder once Laura is forced to choose between what her job demands of her and what the family she left behind genuinely still needs from her. It streams on Peacock. When Calls the Heart (2014-present) When Calls the Heart is based on the novels of Janette Oke and leans heavily into old-fashioned, thoroughly feel-good sentiment throughout. Beginning in the year 1910, it follows a young teacher, Elizabeth Thatcher, played by Erin Krakow, as she leaves a relatively wealthy family behind to take up a teaching job in a rough, rural Canadian mining town. She gets some welcome help settling into her new surroundings from a mountie, Constable Jack Thornton, played by Daniel Lissing. There is romance, drama and plenty of eventual triumph across a cast largely led by women, all delivered with exactly the gentle tone and big heart that the premise promises from the outset. The show has now run for 13 seasons and counting and, much like Yellowstone, has already spun off two further series of its own, When Hope Calls and Hope Valley: 1874. It streams on Hallmark+ through Prime Video. Little House on the Prairie (1974-1984) Little House on the Prairie, the original series that ran from 1974 to 1984, is of course the obvious place to go next if it has somehow been missed altogether. There are nine full seasons of the classic show to work through, plus three additional follow-up television movies on top of that. It quickly grew out of its early reputation as little more than a knockoff of The Waltons to become both a genuine fan favourite and a critical one, built around a wide and expansive cast of characters and a strong social conscience running through it, much of that owed to the direct influence of executive producer and star Michael Landon. Melissa Gilbert plays Laura throughout, while Alison Arngrim, who has a brief cameo appearance in the new Netflix version, frequently steals entire scenes as the wonderfully nasty neighbour Nellie Oleson. It is stranger, considerably more melodramatic and far less faithful to Laura Ingalls Wilder's original books than the current Netflix series chooses to be, but it may well be the actual reason the Little House name has stayed so firmly in the public conversation for this long, even more so than the original novels that started it all in the first place. It streams on Peacock and Prime Video. Taken together, these ten shows cover almost every angle of the same basic appeal that has made the new Little House on the Prairie such a runaway success: resourceful young women, tightly knit families, unforgiving landscapes and the slow, hard-won business of building a life from very little. Whether the pull is toward Canadian orphans, English governesses, Yorkshire vets or Montana wagon trains, there is enough here to fill the gap comfortably until season two of the Netflix version eventually arrives. What this means for you For anyone who has already finished Netflix's Little House on the Prairie and is waiting on season two, this list is a practical viewing guide for the wait. • For viewers: the ten shows are spread across Netflix, Peacock, Britbox, PBS, Crunchyroll, Paramount+ and Hallmark+ via Prime Video, so getting through the whole list may require more than one subscription. • Time commitment: Heartland is closing in on its 20th season and the original Little House on the Prairie runs nine seasons plus three movies, so binging everything is a genuine time investment. Questions & Answers 1. When is season two of Netflix's Little House on the Prairie coming out? An exact release date has not been given, but a second season is already in production. 2. How long did the original Little House on the Prairie series run? It ran from 1974 to 1984, spanning nine seasons plus three follow-up television movies. 3. Which show on this list is a Yellowstone spin-off? 1883, starring Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, tells the origin story of the Dutton family generations before Yellowstone. 4. Where can Anne With an E be streamed? It streams on Netflix. 5. How many seasons has Heartland had? The show is coming up on its 20th season. 6. Does When Calls the Heart have spin-offs? Yes, it has produced two spin-off series, When Hope Calls and Hope Valley: 1874. 7. What is All Creatures Great and Small based on? It is adapted from the autobiographical novels of writer James Alfred Wight, better known by his pen name James Herriot. https://trendkia.com/en/entertainment/netflix-para-little-house-on-the-prairie-dekha-chuke-hain-aba-bari-hai-ina-10-sirija-ki-8206 TrendKia — Har trend, sabse pehle.