***NOVEL THOUGHTS***
The backdrop of this story is a little known industrial incident that happened during the Depression in West Virginia, when any paying job, was a good job. The only trouble was this job, digging a tunnel through a mountain filled with silica known as Hawk's Nest near the Gauley River, was a death sentence or at the very least, a lifetime of illness and the bosses on the job, didn't care at all. Little care to protect the workers was taken and in fact were bullied with guns and whips to keep the men on the job. These men, many African-Americans coming up from the south when learning of the need for workers, were subject to horrendous working conditions. The explosions made into the mountain caused plumes of deadly dust filled with silica that when breathed in would clog the lungs with what could only be called "cement" leading to severe coughing fits and eventually would kill the victim by suffocation. The workers were paid but the company deducted room and board, purchases at the company story and any other expenses they deemed fit, leaving the worker with barely anything for their labor. Death was a daily occurrence and many bodies were just packed up and dumped in unnamed graves far from the work site. Families were never told their loved one died or where they were buried. Today, there is a monument to these men in remembrance.
But this historical fiction novel is also a love story. Gainey Floyd, postmistress of Mount Lookout, is a woman with a secret from her past. In her youth, her fiancée died at the same time she found she was pregnant and had to give her baby boy up for adoption, a decision that haunted her whole life. When Sully, a dowser is run out of Kline, WV because of some shady claims he could find water, shows up in Mount Lookout, Gainey is skeptical. She puts Sully to task to find water for friends and surprises her when he does. Jeremiah Weber, a confirmed bachelor, shows up in Mt Lookout to bring Sully back to be dealt with by those in Kline he swindled but despite Sully's success finding the water he said he would, Jeremiah's mind is unchanged. Overtime, Jeremiah and Gainey find they are attracted to each other and it is sweet to watch as their affection develops. Through coincidences, divine intervention or just good detective skills, Sully seems to be able follow the trails of "lost people" and reconnects them with family all the while his own orphaned past plagues him and his desire for people "who won't forget him when he is gone." He will eventually find that all of the folks in Mount Lookout will become that family he has always been missing.
Despite the difficult subject of Hawk's Nest, the story of finding love and family at any age is quite refreshing. Also, Gainey's conscience leads her to want to help the men by bringing food, nursing care and companionship during their suffering away from family. Usually selfish, Sully is also motivated to help others.
The characters are likeable and well written with perfectly honed personalities. The author offers a trail to Gailey's mystery but by about threequarters through the story, there's a great twist which keeps everything interesting. Exposing the greed of the Hawk's Nest project will easily get the reader angry as it is meant to. To treat the workers as expendable was deplorable and even though a lawsuit was eventually filed, the compensation was a joke, except to the lawyers.
The difficulties of survival during the Depression is only mildly touched on in this novel, rather, the way the characters give what they can to help each other, is a positive theme throughout the novel and a good lesson for us all. It is a book about hope, love, faith and friendship.