Grace Livingston Hill's "The Prodigal Girl" was published in 1929 and the story is set in 1920, a town in Pennsylvania. I always love reading Grace's stories for the religious and romance angle, this has romance but it is more a family centered and a father's shock at his children turning too worldly. I especially liked the minister's response to the children's questions about evolution and not believing in God. Also "there is nothing new under the sun" the so called experts are telling the parents to let the kids be independent.
Story in short- Chester Thorton has had a shock and the need to escape to a simpler place so his children have a chance at being good citizens.
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“If people would really study the Bible more they would find in it a liberal education. They would find wonders in it that have never yet
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been revealed. But they are being discovered now. It is marvelous how the scriptures have been opened up in even the last ten years. Discoveries, history, the shaping of nations, archaeology, are all giving keys to that which has long been locked away from the knowledge of man, and it will not be long before the world is startled into knowing that the old despised Book has all the time contained the germs of all knowledge.” What a scream he was. The idea of talking about archaeology! When
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everyone knew that they were digging up bones of extinct animals that were living millions of years ago, just perfectly proving that the Bible was all off, and evolution was the only thing. But of course, a minister had to pretend to believe all those things or he wouldn’t be paid his salary.
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“Suppose we go away from the table, anyway, Chester,” she suggested, “so that the maid can clear away. You’ve scarcely eaten a thing. Jane, you and Doris take your pudding up to the sitting room while your father finishes. He is all tired out and ought not to be disturbed while he eats. Take another cup of coffee, Chester, dear. Your nerves are all worn out. You must have had a hard day today. I’m afraid things haven’t gone as well as you hoped at the office. But never mind, dear! Don’t let it worry you. Whatever
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comes, we’ve got each other. Remember that and be thankful.” “Got each other!” exclaimed Chester strickenly. “But have we?” “Of course we have,” cheered his wife. “Now dear, drink that hot coffee and you’ll feel better. Come, and then we’ll go into the library and you’ll lie on the couch and tell me all about it. Then by and by when you are rested I’ll call the children and you can talk to them, or perhaps tomorrow morning. You know you are in no frame of
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mind to talk calmly to them, and in the classes I’ve been attending about child rearing they say it is simply fatal to talk excitedly to a child, that it arouses antagonism, and that really is the worst thing we can do. You know really they are human beings like ourselves and have to be given a chance to express themselves. They won’t stand for radical discipline such as you and I passed through. Really Chester, the children of today are
quite, quite different from a few years ago. You know things have changed, and
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young people have developed. There is a more independent attitude—” “Stop!” cried Thornton. “Stop right there! Eleanor, if you have swallowed that rot whole and are going to take that attitude I shall go
mad. Express themselves! I feel as if the whole universe has gone crazy.”
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Well, Betty could have the car now that she had been coaxing for for over a year. Of course she was a little young for a car, only a trifle over seventeen, but all her friends had them, and it would relieve the situation for Eleanor wonderfully
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if she could have the family car free for herself and not have it continually off with Betty and her friends. Of course Chris would be upset over Betty having a car, but Chris could wait another year or two. A boy wasn’t really fit to own a car till college age, though of course some of them did. But there were other things for Chris, and his time would come later. And there was Jane and the twins! Oh, it would be rare to buy Christmas gifts this year with no grim ghost of want hovering behind to restrain his every impulse
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Betty kind of reminded me of a more hard boiled Betty Anderson, from the old time radio show "Father Knows Best". I think Jim Anderson could learn something from Chester Thorton. I looked up the Mermaid 6 car: the description tells what a rich father would give his daughter in 1930. LOL Grace knew her times well.
I cringed every time I heard Betty call her parents by their first name. I did not care for her until after her accident when she was saved by David, prior to that she kept running away from responsibility, she should have stayed for Dudley's parents but maybe that would be asking too much from a teen to do, especially if the parents want to know the circumstances of their son's behavior. I loved the Eleanor was so loving to her husband and he was thinking of his family. I can understand Betty after giving her word having a hard time not following througj, the young have such codes. I loved that Chris stepped up and all the children started to enjoy Bible school and the minister and Thorton's need to help more children and parents. Loved this story! I kept waiting for David to meet Betty, I knew it would come and the student clergy came at the perfect time.