This is my favorite book in this series. It's very different in format than the previous three books. The book switches back and forth between two stories, one set before the Civil War and the other present day.
The story from 1861:
Bonnie Rose (O’Brien) - orphaned, kidnapped, raped, baby taken from her, moving with her younger sister to Wildwood to start a new life as a teacher.
Maggie May - 9 yr old sister, likes horses like their dad.
Big Neb - a slave, a good man, watches out for Bonnie Rose.
Essie Jane - a young slave girl Bonnie is kind to and who helps Bonnie.
Captain James Engle - kind and good, cares for Bonnie Rose.
Mr. Grayson Hardwick - wagon master, takes them to Wildwood along with supplies for Mr. Delevan.
Mr. Delevan - rich man, employer, evil. Hires men to patrol the area, supposedly to keep the people safe.
Children:
Brady Riley 7
Catherine Riley 9
3 more, (2 are older boys Aiden 13 and Tomas 11)
Klara Baum 14
3 more + boy infant (sister Corrie 10)
People are disappearing, they're called Gonefolk. Everyone is afraid and Bonnie is blamed.
The story from present day:
Allie Kirkland - her deceased dad was a film director, she is hired as a production assistant for a movie about Wildwood, then hired to play Bonnie Rose because she looks like her. Like the previous books in the series, she has a negative relationship with her mother.
Stewart - nerdy boy from her apartment.
Doesn’t make sense the actors really live on set for three months the way they did back in 1861, including gold claims.
“Organization and analysis prevents paralysis” Ch 5
"My voice sounds like Ma's - so much so that it wrenches my heart like a fist reaching in. That's how the grievin' becomes after a time. You've tossed off the black blanket, but scraps of it fall on you unexpected, your life always a quilt with a dark patch or two. The Good Lord uses those to show off the bright colors, I think." Ch 9
"Follow your heart, but always take your brain with you." Ch 13
"It didn't even matter. When you're laughing hard enough, nothing does." Ch 16
"She taught me that I was worth something, that I mattered. Sometimes, just one person is enough to make you believe it...Your job is to find [yourself], and to make sure that when you find her, you find all the best things inside her, all the beautiful and unique things - just like the star on the top of the rock. God made you smart, talented, and pretty. Put that stuff on the surface. There's no reason to go around taking a swipe at people before they can take a swipe at you. Just give them a chance, and see how it goes." Ch 20
"I feel like we owe it to them to get it right, to honor their lives...Something happened to the residents here. They deserve for the truth to finally come out." Ch 22
"You may miss your daddy, sugar pie, and I know you do. You always will. But you got to remember, God's just one prayer, or one thought, or one hope away...You lean on that when the world goes dark. Whatever big hurt you've got inside you, God can cover it over. Don't be afraid to open up and ask." Ch 22
"Maybe a tragedy is exactly that - a singular thing, a shadow we travel through on the way to a different destination. Maybe the bigger tragedy is the one we undergo by choice. The decision never to walk forth from the shadow and see what lies beyond it." Ch 22
"I’d lived my life as if I had all the time in the world - time to think about relationships, time to understand why I was put on the planet, time to make my life count for something, time to make a difference. I'd never really understood that at any moment, time could run out." Ch 25
"Some of the unexpected moments in life are the ones you remember the most." Ch 26
"When you love someone - really love someone - that person's happiness becomes your own happiness. I had finally figured that out. Life isn't about protecting yourself, it's about tearing the box wide open and letting other people in. The people you meet come with lessons to teach." Ch 26
"When the right person steps into your life, you know it." Ch 26
"One thing a near-disaster will do is bring families together." Ch 26
"Life should never be a stagnant thing. Just like the rivers, we thrive when the water flows in and washes away the silt of the past. All the debris we cling to doesn't keep us afloat, it kills the life within us." Ch 26
"I didn't even want to think about [him]. He didn't belong in this day or anywhere in my life. I wouldn't let what he'd done steal one day of my future." Ch 26
"The thing I had hoped and prayed for all these years had finally been just...handed to me. But like so many answered prayers, it had come with the knowledge that I had stored up my treasure in the wrong place. The important thing isn't proving you can achieve a goal, but living every moment along the way, even the side trips. Perhaps, especially the side trips." Ch 26
"Some of our best moments are born of the worst...In film, and in life, the highest point arrives just after the lowest." Ch 26
"My life been a' adventure - wit' pain, hard work, love, and blessin's. Lord give me everythin' I need, day by day, and the blessin' part is, I knowed that while it was happenin'. Didn' go 'round wantin' mo', way these young folk do today. All that wantin' make you pow'ful unhappy. I learn that early, so I jus' spend my life thankin'. Thankin' the Almighty fo' everythin'." Epilogue
"I just fall on my knees, and thank God, thank God, thank God. He a God of miracles and wonders. And love the greatest one of all. This big ol' world can't never, ever get enough of it." Epilogue