Afbeelding auteur

Gertrude E. Finney (1892–1977)

Auteur van The Plums Hang High

9 Werken 43 Leden 4 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Werken van Gertrude E. Finney

The Plums Hang High (1955) 28 exemplaren
Muskets along the Chickahominy (1953) 5 exemplaren
Yes, a homestead 2 exemplaren
Stormy Winter 1 exemplaar
One Woman's Land 1 exemplaar
Sleeping Mines (1951) 1 exemplaar
Life is a journey 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1892-05-13
Overlijdensdatum
1977-05
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
Morocco, Indiana, USA
Plaats van overlijden
Spokane, Washington, USA
Woonplaatsen
Spokane, Washington, USA
Opleiding
State College of Washington
Beroepen
historical novelist
young adult writer
Organisaties
Amethyst Club
Authors Guild
Eastern Washington Historical Society
Spokane Writers
Women in Communications
Korte biografie
Gertrude E. Finney, née Bridgeman, was born in Morocco, Indiana. Her father George Bridgeman, a hardware merchant, drew a homestead lot on the Coeur d’Alene Indian Reservation and moved the family to northwest Idaho. After his death when Gertrude was 18, she went to work in a general store in Harrison, Idaho. In 1912, she married Dr. John M. Finney, a prominent physician and surgeon in Spokane, Washington, with whom she had four children. She became a well-known author of meticulously-researched historical novels for young people beginning with Sleeping Mines, published in 1951. Her other nine books included The Plums Hang High, To Survive We Must Be Clever, Stormy Winter, and Life is a Journey. She was a member of the Authors Guild, Eastern Washington Historical Society, and Spokane Writers.

Leden

Besprekingen

Because her husband Jethro dreams of becoming a farmer in a new land, Hannah Maria sails with him from England to America. They imagine plucking down one of the storied American fortunes said to grow like plums on trees. But no one told the couple that... The Plums Hang High by author Gertrude E. Finney.

After stumbling upon and enjoying this book back in my adolescence and being deeply affected by an unexpected scene, I've wanted to revisit the book for years. But it was a long shot that I'd ever find a copy of it.

• Was it a novel, a biography, or a biographical novel?

• I couldn't remember the title.

• I couldn't remember the author's name.

• I couldn't remember the names of anyone in the book.

• I remembered only one second of that one unexpected scene with clarity and...

• maybe a redheaded woman on a blue cover with a barn or something?

It took a lot of digging through pictures of old Scholastic books on the internet, hoping to run into a book cover that would match the vague red and blue image in my head, before I came across this book. I was still rather unsure because there wasn't any barn or house on the cover and the title still didn't ring a bell.

Nonetheless, I was hopeful.

And maybe halfway or so through the book, I started to remember bits of what I was reading, making me more confident before I finally reached that one scene that's stuck with me all these years—

The "long shot" hope I'd had all this time was a reality.

How appropriate, considering this is the story of a family living and loving through ups and downs and persevering through setbacks and long odds. Aside from one line that rubbed me the wrong way this time around (Hannah Maria thinking she's living part of her life like "a common gypsy"), I found about as much pleasure and inspiration reading this old-fashioned book as I did decades ago.

No, this isn't my normal kind of book review, if it's a review at all. But because, in a nutshell, reading is all about hope and inspiration for me, it's well worth it to record such a hopeful and inspiring bookish journey.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
NadineC.Keels | 2 andere besprekingen | Sep 25, 2021 |
Selection of this book was based on nostalgia and to determine if my memory of reading this book more than 45 years ago was correct. I do not recall what made me think of this title, but I do remember that it was probably the first book that I ever bought. It was in elementary school, from one of the Scholastic flyers or some early 1960's equivalent of that. It probably cost 25 cents, maybe less. I thought that this was where I learned what Clydesdale horses were, how horses are measured by "hands," and where I first read about alkaline soil. I also thought I remembered a scene where a pioneer family used a bit of donated flour to make a large pancake to lay on the chest of a severely ill baby in an attempt to save her life. When the mother went outside, the older siblings, who were themselves cold and near starvation, took and ate the pancake. It left such an impression on me - perhaps because I could not comprehend such poverty at that time in my life. Two other memories: a farmer judging the productivity of a dormant piece of farm land by noting how battered the corn crib was - it must have held lots of corn - and a final memory of the guilt that a young girl felt after thinking she lost the family's sourdough starter. Without that, they would be doomed to a poor quality flat bread until someone might pass their isolated farm with enough sourdough to share.

So with these memories in mind, I got the book from the library. My memory is intact! My only false memory is the sourdough starter. That was not in the book, so if anyone remembers that scene from some childhood book, let me know! The three star rating is purely nostalgia; the book is sort of a typical American dream, anyone can overcome adversity and succeed with hard work and faith in the land of opportunity of the American West in the 1800's.


Interesting, but not unexpected since this book was written in 1955 - only five other people on Goodreads have read this book!
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
TheresaCIncinnati | 2 andere besprekingen | Aug 17, 2015 |
Haiku Review:

What is a
Chickahominy?
Read the book.

SMD
9.16.2010
 
Gemarkeerd
19vatermit64 | Sep 16, 2010 |
This is the story of a couple and their baby from an upper-class British family who emigrate to America to find their fortune farming. They expect their way to be eased by the presence of the bride's brother, who eloped to American with a servant.

The culture shock is enormous. The bride is stunned to find that servants are quite rare, and that without them, housekeeping is very physically demanding. They go through some very difficult times: "the plums hang high", but eventualy prosper and become part of their new country.

I've read this several times.
… (meer)
1 stem
Gemarkeerd
PuddinTame | 2 andere besprekingen | Jul 10, 2007 |

Statistieken

Werken
9
Leden
43
Populariteit
#352,016
Waardering
3.9
Besprekingen
4
ISBNs
1