I've noticed that although this series has pretty simple predictable plots, they're still immensely enjoyable to anticipate, guess, and experience the plot-points as they unfold. I like that we seem to have returned to the roots of the series with this book. In the first book, the Quilter's Apprentice, we got to see a lot of Sylvia's recollections of the past, making it a WWII historical fiction genre mashup in some ways, and in this installment, we get some antebellum and Civil War stories while we watch the Bergstroms starting their farm and building the manor. I also like that in this book, Sylvia's the main character-- we haven't seen much of Sylvia in the last two books and I missed her. It's uncommon to have an elderly main character, and I've been enjoying it.
First off, fuck all of the Bergstrom ancestors portrayed in that memoir except for Gerda. There was also a part where this kid's pro-slavery dad gets shot by horse thieves and the kid blames abolitionists? Fuck that kid and fuck his dad. Also, Fuck Anneke and Hans as well? Anneke is so passive and wishy-washy that she can't take a moral stand on any issue. Hans clearly loves that she's the perfect submissive wife. I get that she's in a vulnerable position, isolated from any family and friends and is at the mercy of her husband out in the wilderness, but god, there are some issues that being ambivalent and 'not taking sides' means that you tacitly are accepting the oppression. You are tacitly supporting evil. Hans too, he insists on an 'equitable' approach of getting along with both pro-slavery and anti-slavery people. 'Can't we all just get along,' they say to the runaway slave and the slavers trying to drag them back to a life of torture and rape? 'Can't we all just get along? Why must we take sides?' Their failure to take a moral stand is a black mark against their character. Hans also said that the issue of slavery was 'not his fight.' DUDE. 'It doesn't effect ME, so who CARES that millions of black people are being tortured, beaten, whipped, raped, and sold by lazy greedy southerners with the explicit permission of the government! It doesn't effect ME, I'm not BLACK!' What a piece of shit. The ambivalent attitude of Hans and Anneke made it very confusing that they would become participants in the Underground Railroad.
It is documented that there were a lot of german immigrants who were abolitionists around that period in history, so it was a believable addition to the Elm Creek 'lore'. I liked learning about the folklore legend about the Underground Railroad quilts, I never knew about that before. What a clever trick.
One thing I have to say, I really felt Sylvia's plight of discovering that her family heroes were not good people after all. Her family heroes were indifferent about slavery and women's rights. It was actually Gerda who gave a shit, not so much Hans or Anneke. I didn't like that Hans fed the slavers and that Jonathan gave doctoring services to a southern-sympathizer. The book has this very neo-liberal mindset that 'ALL people deserve respect and dignity, regardless of their beliefs!' NO, actually. SLAVERS, do NOT deserve dignity or respect, they are not owed any kindness. Also, Hans' explanation for feeding the slavers and showing them hospitality was that he dIDN'T WANT THE HORESES TO GO HUNGRY. -- SIR. What about the human being that they're trying to kidnap back into torture!???? But god forbid the HORSES go hungry! Truly mind-blowing.
At the same time, the book was kind of scared of its own source material? Jennifer made sure we all knew how /distasteful/ Hans, Anneke, and Gerda found it when the slavers said the N word. Again with the neo-liberal ideology. Systemic oppression? That's fine, we can't change the status quo. The N word? TOO FAR!!! She made sure we all explicitly knew that they were uncomfortable with the N word, even though that makes no sense, given that Hans was perfectly okay feeding and housing the slavers-- but the N word is somehow a bridge too far. Even among abolitionists, use of the N word was so widespread it was considered uncontroversial. Gerda, Anneke, and Hans shouldn't have been so surprised or disgusted to hear the N word. It seemed odd that they would be shocked by that.
The end to Joanna's story was so sad. What Anneke did is so unimaginably evil. And then to make it worse, not only did she betray a woman back into torture, rape, and slavery, she made them all swear not to tell her son. She basically killed Joanna twice by making SURE that Joanna's memory and sacrifice would be permanently erased. Anneke is irredeemable, she literally threw a woman into the hands of devils because she got salty that her husband was being sexist and said no more working for you. She condemned a woman to unimaginable torture, and she completely betrayed her adopted son by lying to him for his entire life. It was painful for Sylvia to learn that at the core of her family history is a seed of evil and darkness.
It was cool to see the twist at the end that the boys were raised in such a way that their parentage was kept deliberately vague to protect them. I was expecting Anneke to sell Joanna out, but I didn't see the twist that Sylvia could have been descended from Joanna and not Anneke coming.
Great addition to the series.