Life on the prairie is difficult, especially for a single man. Everett Cline has made several attempts to marry, but all of them have fallen through—including two mail-order brides who fell for other men. His failed marriage attempts have made him the town joke, and Everett has resigned himself to a life of bachelorhood. It’s natural that he’s less than pleased when his best friend’s wife arranges one more mail-order bride for him. It’s clear the moment that that she steps off the train that Julia Lockwood does not belong on the prairie, and Everett can’t imagine why she’d choose him over any of the other men in their town.
Julia came to Salt Flatts as a last resort, and she wouldn’t be considering marriage if it wasn’t the only way she could ensure protection from the kind of men who forced her to run away. She has no idea what sort of work homesteading will require of her, but she’s determined to prove herself if it means Everett will accept a marriage of convenience with her. But would a man like Everett be happy with a woman who is more farmhand than wife, who will never fill his house with children? Julia knows men have been unable to resist her beauty in the past—will Everett be any different?
Some of you may know that I wrote a historical romance last summer that featured a mail-order bride. My novel needs a lot of work before it’s ready for publication, so I’m always eager to read the newest mail-order romances to see what’s catching the eyes of publishers and readers. I wasn’t entirely sure what to expect from A Bride for Keeps, but the fact that Everett had been jilted by other mail-order brides before Julia definitely intrigued me.
One of the things I loved most about A Bride for Keeps is that it didn’t skimp on the gritty details of how difficult prairie life was. Men like Everett didn’t send for mail-order brides because they couldn’t be bothered courting a woman closer to home—they did so because women were scarce in places like Salt Flatts, and not every woman was up to the hard life of homesteading and farming. A lot of novels about mail-order brides focus on the struggles the women are fleeing from, but not the difficulties they were signing up for living in the middle of nowhere, working from sun-up to sun-down on a farm that may not even give them enough produce to see them through the winter. A Bride for Keeps definitely captures both sides of the story, and I applaud it for that.
That’s not to say that this novel skimps on the difficulties its female characters face. Julia, like many heroines before her, is fleeing a life she doesn’t want and a man she needs protection from. This could be predictable, except that her situation is entirely believable for a time when women had very little rights and needed a man (father, husband, brother, etc) to keep them from harm. Julia was hurt by a man she believed loved her, and she takes this hurt into her marriage to Everett. As a result of her experience, she believes her beauty can only bring her harm, and that her appearance is to blame for what happened to her. She doesn’t think she’s worthy of Everett’s love because another man took her virtue, so a marriage of convenience is her only hope. Sadly, this isn’t a situation that is entirely bereft from our society—there are many victims of rape and abuse that think they are for blame for what they suffered. Julia’s situation is dealt with very sensitively and realistically, and her journey to freedom is incredibly heart-warming.
Julia isn’t the only female character needing to escape. One of Everett’s previous brides married his neighbour, Ned, because she believed he could offer her a better life than Everett. Ned might have had a better farm, but his treatment of Helga is not something any woman should suffer through. Although Helga doesn’t play a huge part in the novel, her relationship with Ned presents interesting parallels to Everett and Julia’s situation, and provides a much needed reminder that not every mail-order marriage ends in happiness.
I don’t want to make it sound like this book is bleak, but it did contain a lot of historical details I’ve not come across in romance novels before. For example, Julia’s fear of dying in childbirth or losing children was very apt for a time when doctors were scarce and women had to struggle without pain relief. There are other, less-bleak details that made this story come alive for me, like Julia learning to milk a cow, living in a soddy house and waiting for a real bath tub to be delivered rather than bathing in the creek.
The spiritual side of this story didn’t seem terribly unusual to begin with—Everett is a believer but Julia has never regularly attended church—but as the story developed, the spiritual aspect wove into Julia’s guilt and fears about being unworthy. The message might be simple, but the scene in which Julia comes to realise that she isn’t to blame for what happened to her and that her past doesn’t make her any less worthy in God’s eyes is beautiful and uplifting.
A Bride for Keeps might have its moments of humour and quirky secondary characters, but it’s much more than simply a cute, western romance. The depth of character development and the realism in these characters’ struggles with life on the prairie make it stand out from the many mail-order bride romances in the Christian market. Not to mention, its message of hope and redemption is one that we all need to be reminded of.
Review title provided by Bethany House.