It’s been rather quiet on Layered Pages lately. I do promise to try to pick up the pace again soon. I have had a lot going on as many of you know. I’ve been reading a lot more lately so I have several reviews to draft. This past weekend I picked up, Into The Wilderness by Sara Donati. I am almost half way through it. For those of you who have read it, you will know it is a big novel to digest. I’m enjoying it thus far; the story takes place in one of my favorite periods in American History. Check out the Book blurb below.
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Weaving a vibrant tapestry of fact and fiction, Into the Wilderness sweeps us into another time and place…and into the heart of a forbidden, incandescent affair between a spinster Englishwoman and an American frontiersman. Here is an epic of romance and history that will captivate readers from the very first page.
When Elizabeth Middleton, twenty-nine years old and unmarried, leaves her Aunt Merriweather’s comfortable English estate to join her father and brother in the remote mountain village of Paradise on the edge of the New York wilderness, she does so with a strong will and an unwavering purpose: to teach school.
It is December of 1792 when she arrives in a cold climate unlike any she has ever experienced. And she meets a man different from any she has ever encountered–a white man dressed like a Native American, tall and lean and unsettling in his blunt honesty. He is Nathaniel Bonner, also known to the Mohawk people as Between-Two-Lives.
Determined to provide schooling for all the children of the village–white, black, and Native American–Elizabeth soon finds herself at odds with local slave owners. Much to her surprise, she clashes with her own father as well. Financially strapped, Judge Middleton has plans for his daughter–betrothal to local doctor Richard Todd. An alliance with Todd could extract her father from ruin but would call into question the ownership of Hidden Wolf, the mountain where Nathaniel, his father, and a small group of Native Americans live and hunt.
As Judge Middleton brings pressure to bear against his daughter, she is faced with a choice between compliance and deception, a flight into the forest, and a desire that will bend her hard will to compromise and transformation. Elizabeth’s ultimate destiny, here in the heart of the wilderness, lies in the odyssey to come: trials of faith and flesh, and passion born amid Nathaniel’s own secrets and divided soul.
Interweaving the fate of the remnants of the Mohawk Nation with the destiny of two lovers, Sara Donati’s compelling novel creates a complex, profound, passionate portrait of an emerging America.
Book Description:
Collide by Michelle Madow
Pilate’s Daughter by Fiona Veitch Smith
Edgar Award-winner and internationally bestselling novelist tells of his improbable conversion from agnostic Jewish-intellectual to baptized Christian and of the books that led him there.
This week has been really interesting and I’ve had lots of great on-line conversations with like-minded book bloggers and authors. That is a big part of the many wonderful things about being plugged in to the book world. Not only do you get to meet wonderful, talented and extraordinary people, you learn and grow so much from them. Also, there is the fact you get to talk about books all day long and what can be more glorious than that?! *Cough* Yes I know…I’m not forgetting reading lots and lots of books!
Now that I’ve gotten that out of the way…let’s talk weekend plans! This weekend I am hoping to finish listening to at least one of those audio books (not holding my breath) and I want to start reading, Winter People by Jennifer McMahon. This year I had planned to get through many of my unread books on my bookshelves at home. Let me tell you, there are a lot and that doesn’t include what’s on my Kindle. I know I should be reading to write reviews but…. this weekend I am solely reading for myself. That is all there is to it.
I do have a couple of projects to start working on. I need to begin drafting a few blog posts for Layered Pages and
The Bookstore
Island of Secrets by Patricia Wilson
The Great Santini by Pat Conroy
A River Runs Through It and Other Stories by Norman Maclean
The Deep by Peter Benchley
Adolf Hitler by John Willard Toland
In My Father’s House by Corrie ten Boom