Absolutely excellent book! If you appreciate historical fiction, especially set amid the Civil War, "The Woodcutter's Wife" is a must. Mary Elizabeth Thomson is not a woman to be tangled with -- using her hands as a weapon, she killed a bear! (I'm a wildlife lover, but in this case, the bear really was planning to dine on her for dinner.) Such are the risks for a young woman who works alongside her husband, chopping wood in the forest and building chairs to be sold in the nearby city of Chattanooga, Tennessee.
I attended high school and college in East Tennessee, so it was really interesting seeing Chattanooga's Civil War history play out on the pages of this book. There weren't a lot of battle scenes, but the author presents a look at daily life for those surrounded by it perils. For Mary and her husband (William), this included troops passing by their farm and wanting to know why William had not joined up.
He had his personal opinions about the war, but was also concerned about leaving Mary behind. Yes, she was a strong and spirited woman, but also battled melancholy, which would be called depression today. The reasons could be found atop a place the couple called Bitter Hill, where they had buried four infants that died before their first birthdays. And while Mary was an able and hardworking woman, William also worried about her being left to operate their farm without any help.
When William suddenly disappears, Mary suspects he's been kidnapped by troops and forced into battle. Of course, she's devastated, as she and William were passionately in love. She is also faced with many challenges and threats, out on a farm all by herself, but an angel shows up in the form of a free slave named John. He has plenty of battle scars, some from once being an owned slave and some from having served in the Union army. Now, John just wants safety and peace, and wandered onto Mary's farm. He needs to work and she sure needs the help, so John becomes her right arm in tending the land, but he also becomes her dear friend. John is truly a wise soul and I think will prove to be one of the most memorable characters I've ever encountered.
Other characters are woven into the story, including two young boys left to fend for themselves and William's best friend, a widower, and his three daughters. As their lives unite and blend, Mary experiences a range of emotions (that I think the author handled very honestly),
but a shocking surprise awaits them all, one that shows us more than just a single form of sacrifice. I won't say what alters the course of more than one path, but the reader is given a very vivid look at how the Civil War impacted people and changed their lives forever, those who actually saw the battlefield and those who didn't.
Definitely a five star read!