God Leads His Dear Children Along...All the Day Long (5.0)
The story, “Some Through the Fire” is about the fictionalized Sweet family (Papa, Mama, Billy, Violet, and Katie, as well as the Boston contingent of Grandmother and cousin Marilyn). The story grabs you in, as the Sweet’s experience the 2017 Atlanta fire, the trauma of The Great War, the post-war Influenza pandemic, and are enmeshed as individuals and as church members in the struggles involved when you stand up for God’s truth. This is a powerful story that knits historical facts with a story that begs the reader to identify with the Sweet family; compels the reader to see what it is like to live above the superficial and commit to Trust in the God who is greater than themselves.
I’m guessing, some might consider this book over-the-top, blatant drama, but IMO message and story really deliver a powerful punch, which was believable not artificially dramatic. The characters both main and secondary were well drawn. Billy was always a star, good at everything he ever attempted, but via The Great War and influenza, Billy has his human prowess stripped away and then he kicks and screams toward a new maturity, a God-honoring maturity. Violet or Ves, as they called her was an immature and idealistic girl when the story opens. She, like many seventeen-year-olds was focused on her immediate future, her dreams, her hope chest, and her convenience. The illustration of the china plate from her hope chest that survives the fire – spoke. Her Mama tells her, “China goes through the fire—three times through—before it is perfect (page 9).” It is from this point; we see maturity like a cloak rest on Violet layer by layer, just as did on Billy.
This book also had a great cast of secondary characters. Some of my favorites are Uncle Ed and Lt. Andrew Alexander (Chaplain, 28th Infantry), known as Andy. Uncle Ed was portrayed as the loveable eccentric. The descriptions of his house helped us see the creepy, dusty, dirty situation that he lived in. When they had lost their home and everything they owned, Uncle Ed took the whole family in, of course, Mama and Ves clean-bombed the house first. We also see little slivers of the special relationship Uncle Ed has with Violet. Andrew was the picture of “the good shepherd,” who cares for others, selflessly without recognition or adulation. His character grows on you and by the time of Billy and Cornelia’s wedding, you know he is a gem.
Part 1, labeled Faith is closes with Violet reflecting on God’s Grace. “Grace. Grace for the moment-by-moment realities. Grace to trust when her human heart could not believe in God’s goodness. Grace to forgive her for turning away in anger against Him. Because He was not just Sovereign, but also a God of Grace” She whispers, “O God, better to lose everything than to lose fellowship and faith in you. O God, forgive me! O God, keep me from turning away (page 86).
Part 2 – Hope. This was an influential section, which further builds Violet’s character, although I became frustrated with the poor choices of those she socialized with, such as her cousin Marilyn, and Marilyn’s hanger-on boyfriends-Harry Newfield and Russell Carver. Violet’s faith journey takes a few hits, but she comes out pure gold by the end.
The antagonists were well drawn and true to the time period and philosophy of that time. The night of insurrection in Boston (the Boston Police Strike of 1919), when Violet and Sadie face a dangerous walk back to her Grandmother’s house without a companion was riveting and has me “speed reading” through the section. Again, this wasn’t overdone or overly dramatic, but clearly showed the number of ways the two women narrowly escaped physical harm and mental anguish. It set up the scene with Violet & Sadie in the upstairs room beautifully. Both women were shaken, but Violet knows she must accept her role as “older sister” to Sadie and unlike Sadie, Violet is secure about her present and her future [God is our refuge & strength…]. But for Sadie, her world is falling apart in many ways, beyond the evening’s insurrection. Sadie admits she is afraid. She states she wishes what she’s read in the Bible was true, even though her Father and Russell state the Bible isn’t true. Violet answers her question and Sadie Trusts Christ. Violet is in awe as she realizes God didn’t bring her to Boston for Harry sake, but for Sadie, and she almost missed God’s plan and purpose.
Part 3 – Love, which shows pictures of love. We see Billy’s love for Cornelia, Andrew’s love for Violet, and even Uncle Ed’s love for his family, and specifically Violet. We also read a gripping scene with Marilyn, Violet, and Harry, which is a sad picture of a hopeless marriage of two selfish and headstrong people (Harry & Marilyn), and their choices that led to a dire situation. Near the end Violet reflects, “Someday she would look back and see not the fires of the past three years, but the faith, hope, and love that had survived and been purified in the flames” (page 277).
My recommendation is to grab this book and read it; read it more than once. I appreciate that Jennifer Hunt capitalized the names of deity and the pronouns referring to deity. I also appreciated that the Christian life wasn’t depicted as easy, where God is simply a genie that grants wishes, the dispenser of everything we want. We see that God gives us Grace for the journey and we are here for His honor and glory. Great Read.