After her life as she knows it ends in heartbreak, Mary Rasmussen, a strong-willed and independent young ranch woman living in the Sandhills of western Nebraska, suddenly feels that everything she has believed in—God, her instincts, the land itself—has failed her. She abandons her cultural and emotional ties, succumbing to circumstances she thinks she is powerless to control. In a rash decision, she marries a conservative, patriarchal preacher who doesn’t understand her, the ranching community, or anything beyond his own beliefs. Mary’s inner turmoil builds as she comes to appreciate the gravity of her situation and the need to take action.
Ladette Randolph is an American author and editor.
The editor-in-chief of Ploughshares, she is also on the faculty at Emerson College and is co-owner of the manuscript consulting firm Randolph Lundine.
She has been the recipient of a grant from the Rona Jaffe Foundation, as well as a Pushcart Prize, a Virginian Faulkner Award, and three Nebraska Book Awards.
This is an amazing book, not just because it depicts the Nebraska setting and characters but also because the characters are true and well-developed. I have taught this to about a half a dozen classes, both undergraduate and graduate, and everyone loves it!
An amazing story about a woman emerging from a coma, learning that she has lost her young husband and her leg in a car accident. Plagued by a sense that she she was singled out for punishment by God, she struggles painfully and slowly to regain her balance and find her place in her world. Brilliantly, sparely drawn characters. I loved every page.
Though I read this as a "professional", and therefore was overly critical as I went along, I found myself enthralled as I would be for a non-work title, and thinking about it often even after I have finished, a true testament. A spare, quiet book, but real and engaging story.
My favorite place on earth is Nebraska. Mary's story is almost the story of every Nebraskan. Nebraskan are pioneers and overcomers, which is Mary's story. My main complaint is in her attempt to thinly veiled attempt to alter names of real places. Growing up around Oconto, your hospital is Kearney, not North Platte. I loved the book, hated the misleading geography!
Even though this book ends on an up note, there's a lot of sadness in it. So I would not recommend it for everyone. We have lived in the area where the plot of this book takes place and many of the towns mentioned are ones I've either lived in or know. But many of the people are not like the ones I know so don't consider this a good look at the Nebraska Sandhills.
A Nebraska woman, Mary, raised on a ranch, loses both her husband and her leg in automobile crash; she returns home and tries to regain a sense of self with her prosthesis (nick named "Peg"), but then is courted by minister, Ward, and finally leaves the ranch to marry him, as a way of going forward with life. He proves to be a righteous tyrant, trying to force Mary into the mould of minister's wife. Mary is too much her own person for this. She finds work for herself in a nursing home. Then just as she has determined to leave Ward, discovers that she is pregnant. She stays to have four children by him. But then meeting a man she loves, she has her awakening and tries to take her children back to her family's ranch and to escape Ward. Ward follows in pursuit, kidnaps the children, and another disastrous accident follows. "In her better moments," Randolph writes of Mary, "she recognized the two accidents bracketing her life with Ward as the metaphor it was."
Randolph's narration is deliberately flat and emotionally deadpan, reflecting Mary's stoicism. The nursing home provides cameo characters, whose stories are tributary to Mary's. Ward may be the triumph of the novel, truly a monster of the deep, and yet totally human. Like Job's, Mary's story questions the justice of hard fate, and the Sandhills setting echoes her questions in the landscape itself. But Mary vows at last: "She'd never again be someone's right hand or someone's helpmeet. She'd find her own path. She was flawed in some way. She didn't know quite how, and it didn't matter. What she did know was she had a lot of work to do to become the woman she was determined to be."
This is a beautifully told, full story, which lives up to and exceeds its promises.
Mary Rasmussen grew up on a ranch in Nebraska. She had an uncanny ability to judge the merits of cattle, loved ranching, married a rancher and thought her life was complete. She was totally devastated when she and her young husband were in an auto accident which took his life and she lost a leg.
During her depression following the accident she was courted by Ward Hamilton, a fundamentalist minister. Although she realized she didn't love him, she married him to try to make some sort of life for herself. She soon realized she would never live up to Ward's idea of a pastor's wife, or indeed the congregation's expectations of her.
Issues concerning ranching, feedlots, environment, religion, and life on the plains all come to bear on this very absorbing story.
Some of the characters in the book, especially Ward, seemed stereotypical. But, of course, stereotypes become stereotypes by containing a good deal of truth.
One of those serendipitous finds that I seldom have time for these days--discovered on the library shelf en route to something else. I am becoming a believer in the first line test, and this passed.
I appreciate the way Randolph takes time to explain aspects of Sandhills life (which, God knows, can be difficult enough to understand) without condescension. The impression I take away is that the business of ranching has changed in the last half-century, and traditionally conservative men and women are going to have to forge their own freedom in new ways if they're going to stay on the land. For the folks in this book, though, the only path to freedom is to leave. That's sad. As every good ballad is.
Reading this book made me realize that if a Christian character is good, it is labeled a Christian book and non-Christians avoid it ("not my cup of tea"). If the Christian character evil, then it's a secular book, everyone reads it and it just reinforces the stereotypes about Christians. I liked the book, I just get tired of cheap shots at Christians. So for the record: Ward may have been a pastor or a preacher or whatever - but he was not a Christian.
I did enjoy this story that takes place in Nebraska. Simple story of a woman whose husband dies in an accident. The woman loses her leg. She then is courted by a sinister minister. We know she doesn't care for him. But then she proceeds to have four children with him. Silly. But well written book. I did want to keep reading it.
The story begins with Mary waking up from a devastating car accident, and continues to show how she attempts to recreate her life after it has veered off. Mary isn't always likable, but she is always interesting. AND, it's set in Custer County, Nebraska, and if you've ever driven along Highway 92, you know how beautiful the Sandhills are.
I liked the way they described the people and area in this book. I've been through that country so it was easy to picture. I did get frustrated with Mary and wondered why she stayed with Ward so long, and even why she got together with him in the first place. It did do a good job of showing how she grows and how she finally learns to take action.
I really enjoyed reading this book. It's told in a very no nonsense Midwestern (Nebraskan) manner, but I found myself wanting to know what was going to happen to Mary next. The plot was very compelling, and as one reviewer said, the Nebraska landscape is as much a character in the book as are the people.
Powerfully emotional novel. The characters were so real. The story will stay with me forever. The force of the truths on its pages knocked me flat. Ladette Randolph is *my* Chekov!