Monday, August 1, 2022

Review: Laura's Shadow

Laura's Shadow Laura's Shadow by Allison Pittman
My rating: 💛💛💛

This was a very slow read. There was a lot of promise of great mysteries to be revealed but everything was discovered on a gradual pace.

I also did not really caught on to why the name Laura was such a bad thing for Mariah. She made her choices knowing facts so I did not believe that what happened was a cause for such a severe reaction.

There was a lot of mistakes made and opportunities for great redemption stories which I missed.

I also would have like to have a bit more insight in Mariah and Merill’s marriage.

*I received a complimentary copy from the publisher. All opinions expressed are my own.*

View all my reviews

About the book:


Family Secrets Spill One Conversation at a Time
 
Visit historic American landmarks through the Doors to the Past series. History and today collide in stories full of mystery, intrigue, faith, and romance.

De Smet, South Dakota—1890 
Young women growing up in De Smet live by two rules: don’t go out in a snowstorm and don’t give your heart to Cap Garland. Young Mariah Patterson only managed to obey one. Orphaned and having devoted her youth to scrapping out a life with her brother Charles, Mariah finds herself with no option but to marry the devoted—but dull—Merrill Gowan. Throwing caution to the wind, she seizes an opportunity to lay her feelings at Cap’s feet, even though she knows Cap sees the world through the torch he carries for Laura Ingalls. Mariah is certain her love for Cap will be strong enough to break both bonds, and she’s willing to risk everything to prove it. 
 
De Smet, South Dakota—1974  
Trixie Gowan is the fourth generation of living Gowan women residing in the sprawling farmhouse on the outskirts of De Smet. Well, former resident. She’s recently acquired her own bachelor girl apartment in Minneapolis, where she works writing ads for a neighborhood paper. She might live and work in the city, but her co-workers still call her Prairie Girl. Thus the inspiration for her comic strip—"Lost Laura"—in which a bespectacled girl in a calico dress tries to make her way in the city. The name is a quiet rebellion having grown up in a household where she’d been forbidden to mention the name, Laura. But when her great-grandmother Mariah’s declining health brings Trixie home for a visit, two things might just keep her there: the bedside manner of Dr. Campbell Carter and the family secret that seems to be spilling from GG’s lips one conversation at a time. 

About the author:


Allison Pittman is the author of For Time and Eternity, Stealing Home, the Crossroads of Grace series, and her nonfiction debut, Saturdays With Stella. A high-school English teacher, she serves as director of the theater arts group at her church. She is also the co-president of a dynamic Christian writers group in the San Antonio, Texas area, where she makes her home with her husband and their three boys.

2 comments:

  1. Nice honest review. I do like books set in South Dakota, especially historical ones, as I can't imagine how they survived those winters!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you. I struggle to find books set in South Dakota.

      Delete

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