The Cephalopod Coffeehouse: June 2015
Welcome one
and all to the Cephalopod Coffeehouse, a cozy gathering of book lovers, meeting
to discuss their thoughts regarding the tomes they enjoyed most over the
previous month. Pull up a chair, order your cappuccino and join in the
fun. If you wish to add your own review to the conversation, please click
the link above to sign on to the link list at the end of this post.
I was disappointed in my reading matter this month with a
couple of books only worthy of 2* (although other readers seemed to enjoy the
books) but I did come across a couple of 4* books.
This month I have chosen a book set in Wyoming in 1887 which I thoroughly enjoyed reading and hope others
will as well. It is classed as Choc Lit –
but it definitely not Mills & Boon.
Approx. 336 pages
Book Description from Amazon
Does
a good deal make a marriage?
Widower Connor Maguire advertises for a wife to raise his young daughter, Bridget, work the homestead and bear him a son.
Ellen O’Sullivan longs for a home, a husband and a family. On paper, she is everything Connor needs in a wife. However, it soon becomes clear that Ellen has not been entirely truthful.
Will Connor be able to overlook Ellen’s dishonesty and keep to his side of the bargain? Or will Bridget’s resentment, the attentions of the beautiful Miss Quinn, and the arrival of an unwelcome visitor, combine to prevent the couple from starting anew.
As their personal feelings blur the boundaries of their deal, they begin to wonder if a bargain struck makes a marriage worth keeping.
Set in Wyoming in 1887, a story of a man and a woman brought together through need, not love …
Widower Connor Maguire advertises for a wife to raise his young daughter, Bridget, work the homestead and bear him a son.
Ellen O’Sullivan longs for a home, a husband and a family. On paper, she is everything Connor needs in a wife. However, it soon becomes clear that Ellen has not been entirely truthful.
Will Connor be able to overlook Ellen’s dishonesty and keep to his side of the bargain? Or will Bridget’s resentment, the attentions of the beautiful Miss Quinn, and the arrival of an unwelcome visitor, combine to prevent the couple from starting anew.
As their personal feelings blur the boundaries of their deal, they begin to wonder if a bargain struck makes a marriage worth keeping.
Set in Wyoming in 1887, a story of a man and a woman brought together through need, not love …
My Review: 4*
Wyoming, late 1880’s, a widowed
farmer advertises for a mail order bride.
Ellen O’Sullivan makes the decision to break away from her life and
answers the advert and is accepted.
Ellen travels alone and for a long time to meet Conn, her new husband,
as they meet we realise that Ellen has not told Conn everything there is to
know about her but being a gentleman he keeps to their bargain.
Conn’s eight year old daughter
has difficulty coming to terms with Ellen as her father’s new wife and puts emotional
pressure on both Conn and Ellen.
The beauty of this well written,
descriptive book is the way we get to understand the main characters as they go
about their daily lives. The interaction
with other characters that may or may not be all they pretend to be is another
thread in this marvellous tale.
This concept of mail order brides
in the ‘wild West’ has been a popular theme in many Western romances but this
book takes the theme that one step further and to new heights. The wonderful descriptions of the nitty-gritty
of life on a farm, the preparations people had to make, the hard work involved
in surviving harsh conditions was told really well.
There is drama, heartache,
acceptance and romance in this lovely book.