This is a book that has a lot going for it, and becomes an engrossing read. To get the shortcomings out of the way, it doesn't quite live up to a five-star read, even though the author clearly put in five-star levels of effort. The author's style is part of this, as it's written with a fly-on-the-wall vision of the main characters thoughts, but I don't think the main character even once used the word 'I' when it came to her thoughts. It did create a distance for me from the character, at first. There are also some modern sentiments regarding the environment, women's positions, and Indians that stand-out a little and don't seem entirely believable for a woman of the mid 1700s. With the Indians especially it stands out, as in one sentence the author portrays the dislike of a woman who watched loved ones die and suffered captivity at the hands of the Abenaki, but a few paragraphs later seems almost sympathetic to their plight.
These drawbacks are easily outweighed by the books qualities. Thought it takes a while to warm up to the main characters, after the first quarter of the book she really develops into an enthralling figure, made more so by the fact that the main character, Jemima Sartwell, was a real person who actually suffered through these evens. How correct the details are is unknown, since it is historical fiction, but it's at times hard to imagine how a woman could survive all this person was put through. The historical details are also well done, the research is evident. This is especially true of the history of southeastern Vermont, along the Connecticut river, where most of the book takes place. Readers from New England would probably find a lot there to interest them. All told, it's a well done recreation of New England in the mid 1700s, and a superb effort at preserving a piece of local history.