After several months of waiting to get to find book #2 in the series... I'm not sure if this one was as exciting as book #1. Well, it just wasn't, so I had to drop a star off my review.
Right off the bat (by the time I was just a couple of chapters in to this one), I felt like I should just delete everything in my brain of what happened in book #1 (which was about a voyage from New York, down through the Panama Canal and up to Washington Territory on the west coast). Seemingly, fairly immediately, Cheney gives up on having a medical practice out west, and she appeared back home almost overnight. What?! I went through that entire voyage with her in book #1... for naught?!?!?! That was so aggravating, but I got over it. (Or am still getting over it, maybe?)
Again, the plot changes the trajectory of the rest of the series quickly -- and now Cheney is flying off the handle (yes, again). This time to Arkansas. I feel like she keeps making flighty decisions, and I'm not sure why. But it felt nice for her to settle in finally, at least for the rest of this book, in a backwoods community and try to blend in with the country folk who live there.
The elements in the books I enjoy the most is when Cheney is doing her job -- doctoring people. Of course, in order for this to happen, there first needs to be acceptance from the local people, and she doesn't receive this handed to her on a silver plate, like most things in life have been for her. She's really an excellent doctor, and is able to make some headway with the people there, even with various complications and conflicts that arise (including lots of bullets whizzing around).
I also like that there's a good amount of faith elements scattered all throughout the plot. Several different characters talk about their relationship with God. I'm just glad this is in the story!
Now then. Let's talk about Maeva for a moment. She's an herb woman who lives there in the Ozark Mountains, and she's the only person that the mountain folk can reach out to for medical advice -- until Cheney comes along. Cheney senses competition in Maeva -- and not for reasons you can see on the surface. It has more to do with which of the two women has the attention of a certain young man of interest. For some reason, this whole speculative situation just rubbed me the wrong way...
The ending... is quite unsettling to me. There's a character who dies -- and I just can't grasp why this was put into the story! For what reason did this "person-who-shall-remain-unnamed" die?! I don't get that. And I also don't understand the decision that is delivered to the reader in those final pages. I was blindsided again.
So now? I'm unsure of what's going to get switched around in book #3... but I'll give it a try.