**MINOR SPOILERS**
This is second book in the Red River of the North series about immigrants. The series follows the struggles and successes of the Bjorklund family who settled in North Dakota around 1880. The author continues this series with a few other series, the next one of which is about Thorliff, Ingeborg’s stepson. I recommend reading this book after the first one.
In the previous book, Ingeborg and Kaaren, married to two brothers, immigrated to North Dakota with them. Both brothers died (Roald and Carl), and Ingeborg and Kaaren worked to sustain their homestead on their own. Their relatives in Norway hear about their situation and ask a distant cousin, Haakan, to go help them. In addition, Roald and Carl’s younger brother, Hjelmar, decides to come and help. He had wanted to immigrate anyway.
The first book in the series had more of a focus on Roald and Ingeborg, Carl and Kaaren, and their children. With this book and as the series continues, the author builds more of a sense of community. I enjoyed reading about the people’s lives and their relationships.
The family works from morning to night. The book really conveys how much work the immigrants had to do to survive. They had to be able to do everything for themselves including making their own clothes, churning butter, and so on. The farming work was backbreaking. They saw others infrequently, though there were friends who worked together to get things done such as harvesting grain or breaking sod. At the end of the first book, the families discuss establishing a church and school.
Ingeborg has become quite independent and used to running the homestead on her own. She is a bit prickly about the men assuming that they are in charge. She is attracted to Haakan and, even though she has self confidence when it comes to the homesteading, she is flustered when he begins to show that he is attracted to her as well.
Haakan does not plan to stay in North Dakota. He wants to move further west. As time goes by, he becomes closer to Ingeborg and her two sons as well as Kaaren and Lars. He also becomes a part of the community of immigrants in which they live. Haakan finds that this is where he wants his home to be.
Hjelmar is a bit cocky though he has a good nature. Early in the book, he saves a child without hesitation. He secretly thinks he might marry one of their widows in order to gain the land. He is astonished to find out how independent Ingeborg is. She helps make decisions and wears pants. He is also surprised by the family’s friendship with a Native American woman and her grandson.
On a side note, I thought the family should have called the Native American woman something other than Metiz, which is a term that refers to her heritage. In addition, Metiz was spelled Metis in the first book. As far as I can tell from the internet, Metis is the correct spelling.
The book should appeal to those who are interested in what it might have been to come to the US with hopes for a better life and what it took to survive being an immigrant in North Dakota in the 1880s.
The book has a Christian element. Faith was integral to people’s lives at that time, and they said daily prayers as well as read from the Bible. Faith was automatic but real. Haakan has drifted away from his faith as he has worked at the logging camps for several years. When he comes to North Dakota, he becomes reintroduced to it and especially after praying for survival in a blizzard and for someone who was wounded. Ingeborg struggles a little to put her past (which caused her to be angry with God) behind her, but thoughts pop up once in a while.
The book title reflects something that someone says at the end of the book for a particular reason, but it also reflects the more hopeful tone of this book versus the previous one.
A few word choices and idiom usages were not correct.
A small suggestion to the author: a map of North Dakota could have been included as an extra. I believe that the author included a Bjorklund family tree in later books. It is also available on her website.