The author has done it again! She pulled me in and kept me up reading into the wee hours of the morning. I did NOT want to put this book down.
There are just so many layers to this story I'm not sure where to start. First, it's weird to think of the early 90s as "historical fiction" when it seems like it was just a few years ago. That's when we meet our "older" female main character, Ginny. A widow, she's ready to leave it all behind, head to Europe and while away the rest of her days as a gardener as a descendent of one of the Lords. Man, I felt so sad for her loneliness that she didn't even seem to realize she had.
That was all upended when she learns her estranged brother has died and she needs to return to her family home. She heads there to put everything to rights so she can head off into her sunset years. Clearly, things weren't that simple. To say that she seemed to be being tested by the Lord would be putting it mildly, but not just her. Her nephews and their families had so much deep hurt and pain, having Ginny show up initially seemed to make things worse.
We barely see Harold, Ginny's deceased brother, as a mean teen, but the bitterness he infused into the lives of his sons, the bully he was his entire life, and the needless pain he caused his family spilled over into everything he touched even after he passed. That's what we run into when Ginny meets her nephews.
We can see how generational sin is perpetuated in this story, and such a good reminder for us that people can and do change. We are all prodigals with an opportunity to come home to the Lord, to make amends with those we've wronged, to cut off the familial sin that's passed on.
Luke, so frustrating and angry, with good reason, honestly. He doesn't trust because the only person who seems to have wormed her way into his life is his wife, Bethany. Then there's Mark. Poor Mark who never knew his father's love and is homeless with his 3 children until he learns about his father's death and makes his way back to the family farm. His oldest daughter, Arlo, made me want to just hug her to death, although she would've hated it. She's a prime example of a little girl having to carry the weight of an adult when she should be behaving like a little girl. She did her best to keep her distance from everyone and to protect her siblings.
As they all start to try to work things out, work through the layers to hardened years, battling the lies Harold left behind, a secret comes out that could destroy everything they've been working towards.
Let me tell you, this story took me up to the mountain top and down into the valley. The characters tugged at my heart strings over and over. I wanted to rail against the awful townsfolk, but it made me introspective as to how I treat strangers or those who I know have a past.
But, the Lord. The Lord is present throughout the story. Through the good and the bad, the author uses the characters to nudge our own hearts. Her closing author notes are powerful and I highly suggest not missing them!
*I was sent the book for a social tour and wasn't asked to write a review. This is my personal opinion.