This was an introduction to me of the Shakers, a historical religious cult whom I'd heard of only in passing references to their famous furniture style and the song "'Tis a Gift to be Simple." I was also aware that Shakers believed in separation of the sexes, and celibacy, which is of course why there are no longer any Shakers.
Darcie and her husband Walter take refuge in a nearby Shaker community when the cholera threatens. it is meant to be temporary, but almost immediately Walter is killed in a riverboat accident, while on a trading trip with the men of the colony, leaving Darcie in a difficult position. She is also newly pregnant, news she had not shared with her husband before his death.
While the Shakers are happy to take her in and give her shelter and food, she finds their many, stringent rules difficult to follow. However, since she has no family and nowhere else to go, she is forced to remain. The worst thing is that she knows she will not be allowed to keep and raise her baby. The Shakers not only separate men and women, they also separate the children from their parents to be housed and raised separately. Darcie cannot fathom being separated from her child, and becoming her daughter's 'sister' instead of her mother.
Flynn Keller, a nearby farmer and widower who trains horses, needs help raising his headstrong daughter. He decides to take her to the Shaker community to receive some training and education. Even though they cannot risk meeting or speaking openly, Darcie and Flynn feel a bond. But is it possible for them to become a family?
I really liked this book because the author kept a slight tension on events all the way through the book until the final few pages. It was not scary tension, just the feeling of how can there be an answer to Darcie's dilemma before they take her baby away. I also enjoyed the author's portrayal of how the women in Darcie's life, who called themselves sisters, actually became like sisters to her in many ways.
I haven't read any of the author's other Shaker novels, but I want to see what she does with them, so that is my next foray. I have read several of Ann Gabhart's novels though and not been disappointed.