Klik op een omslag om naar Google Boeken te gaan.
Bezig met laden... The Endless Forest (2011)door Sara Donati
Geen Bezig met laden...
Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. I was very sorry to finish this final book in the Into the Wilderness series. The author is an accomplished storyteller and I found the series compelling. These books have sustained me through a difficult and tumultuous past few months and I will be hard-pressed to find replacements that will capture my attention as they have. ( ) *****SPOILERS******** Overall the story was very enjoyable, intelligent, and interesting. I must admit to being somewhat disgruntled over a huge continuity problem. In "Fire Along the Sky" Callie buys her father's orchard back from Mr. Stiles near the end of that tale. Since the property had been purchased outright by Callie there should not have been the risk of problem with the ownership of the orchard. Also I really wanted to know what the deal was regard Ethan and his sexuality. Was he poxed? Homosexual? Something else? There were a few other continuity issues but to me the property ownership thing was a big problem. This is the sixth and final book in Sara Donati's Wilderness series, historical fiction set in upstate New York spanning the period from late 1792 to mid 1824 - the latter year being when this book takes place. The setting moves back to the location of the first book, the mythical town of Paradise, in the Adirondacks near Lake George and Saratoga, both of which I have visited. The romance focus in this book is on Elizabeth & Nathaniel Bonner's son Daniel, who lost the use of his left arm in the War of 1812, and Martha Kirby, recently returned from living in Manhattan a number of years.  I decided to classify this book as a historical romance rather than historical fiction - because sex is a big part of this book, and the historical setting is not as relevant to the plot. What does drive the plot is the return of the notorious troublemaker, Jemima Southern Kuick Wilde Focht, Martha's mother, and the stepmother of Martha's former best friend, orchard owner Callie Wilde.  The fear that Jemima might lay claim to Martha's inheritance from her father Liam Kirby, or to Callie's orchard, drives Daniel and Martha to go to nearby Johnstown to quickly marry, followed by Callie and Daniel's cousin Ethan Middleton.  The marriage of the latter two is for friendship and protection, as Callie fears she will pass on her mother's mental decline to any children. Jemima left Paradise eleven years before pregnant by Callie's father, and claims that the little boy she brings with her, named Nicholas Wilde for his father, is both Martha's and Callie's half-brother.  Callie, desperate for the family she's lost and knows she will not have otherwise, accepts him as such, but Martha and the rest of Paradise adults are more cautious - especially since Jemima goes away and leaves Nicholas behind along with a couple black servants, who play a part in the story. I never quite understood how Jemima could possibly claim the orchard for her son.  In Fire Along the Sky, the fourth book in the series, Jemima sells the orchard unbeknownst to Callie's father (which leads to his death), and leaves town with the money.  Callie later buys the orchard back, so it seems to me that she should be the owner outright, and not have to fear any claims from her half-brother or former stepmother. Otherwise, the book brings us up-to-date on the lives of other members of the extended Bonner family and their friends.  Both oldest son Luke Bonner's wife Jennet, and Daniel's twin Lily are pregnant - Lily with her first after many miscarriages.  Gabe Bonner marries his childhood playmate Annie, a Mohawk, in secret at the beginning of the book.  And ten-year-old Curiosity "Birdie" Bonner, the youngest child, tells much of the story from her viewpoint. Jemima comes back again at the end of the book, and that plot line gets resolved.  Donati ends the book (and series) with an epilogue in the form of newspaper articles and advertisements - including obituaries - that span the next twenty years.  Some deaths are to be expected, given the ages of the characters, some are surprises.  In a comment to a reviewer upset with this epilogue, Donati said, "I certainly wasn't bored with the series, but I did know that Bantam [the publisher] wouldn't give me a contract for another book in the series. That made the novel especially difficult to write, both technically and emotionally. I felt obligated to bring everyone to a fairly stable place." I was fine with the epilogue.  Many of the characters that survive past 1843 - and their descendants - show up in the first book in Donati's next series, set  in New York City forty years later, in 1883, The Gilded Hour. Kate Reading's narration of the audiobook was superb as usual. © Amanda Pape - 2017 [The e-audiobook, and a print copy for reference, were borrowed from and returned to public libraries.] Book #6 in the Into the Wilderness Series and the end of the story (?). This book in the series caught the reader up on all the family members and other known characters from the 1st couple books. We got to know Daniel, Lilly, Martha Quick & Caley a lot better. Many secrets came out and it was an EXCELLENT chapter in the lives of the Bonner Family and Paradise. It was heartwarming, edge of seat adventure and heart wrenching. Have tissues ready for the final epilogue. Although you want to know the rest of the story and how everyone does, it doesn't change how sad it is to mourn the loss of those you come to love, even it is in the form of a literary work of art. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Onderdeel van de reeks(en)Onderscheidingen
Fiction.
Literature.
Romance.
Historical Fiction.
HTML:With a master storytellerâ??s skill and a historianâ??s precision, Sara Donati has delighted readers and critics alike with her bestselling novels of the nineteenth-century New York frontier. Now she brings us The Endless Forest, set in the remote village of Paradise, where the Bonner family that readers first met in Into the Wilderness make their home. The spring of 1824 is a challenging one for the inhabitants of Paradise N.Y. when a flood devastates the village. But for Nathaniel and Elizabeth Bonner, itâ??s also a time of reunion as their children return from far-off places: Lily and her husband from Italy, and Martha Kirby, the Bonnersâ?? ward, from Manhattan. Although Lily is nursing her own grief, it is Martha, fleeing a crushing humiliation, who brings with her trouble that will reverberate in all their lives. In the sudden peace that follows the storm, as families struggle to rebuild, childhood friends Martha and Daniel, Lilyâ??s twin brother, suddenly begin to see each other in a new light. But their growing bond is threatened when Marthaâ??s mother arrives back in Paradise a decade after abandoning her daughter. Jemima Southern is a dangerous schemer who has destroyed more than one family, and her anger touches everyone, as do her secrets. Has Jemima come to claim her daughterâ??or does she have something else in mind? Whatever happens, Martha and Daniel and all the Bonners must stand united against the threats to both heart and home. Painful secrets and hidden sorrows, joy, heartbreak, and passion follow the Bonners through a season of change and renewal. A rich, passionate, multilayered portrayal of family strength and endurance in a fascinating place and time, The Endless Forest will be remembered long after the Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
Actuele discussiesGeenPopulaire omslagen
Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999LC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
|