A Promise for Ellie
A Promise for Ellie
Ratings4
Average rating3
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Series
11 primary booksBlessing, ND is a 11-book series with 13 primary works first released in 1982 with contributions by Lauraine Snelling.
Series
3 primary booksDaughters of Blessing is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 2006 with contributions by Lauraine Snelling.
Reviews with the most likes.
I read this via Book on CD from Recorded Books Inspirational. Overall I enjoyed the story. It was really long though, and not quite enjoyable for the entire time. It starts with an accident that is never explained, and there are a couple other related events that I guess stuck out to me more, but they never had answers and that sort of thing bothers me. The main themes of the book are about growing up, and dealing with anger appropriately. Oh my goodness, the anger that these character personalities felt. I cannot tell you how angry I would get with them sometimes! It was a good book, and I could completely hear the sounds and felt myself there with those homesteading Norwegians, but I just did not love it.
2.5 stars, rounded up
I grabbed this book, thinking that #1 of the series should be a good place to start. But there was a huge chunk missing: especially Andrew and Ellie's entire love story! I was left seeing NOTHING in Andrew for her to like and to fall in love with. She kept saying she loved him for his gentleness and we didn't see any of that. I liked Ellie as a character, but snot-nosed, pouty baby Andrew was both unlikeable and unrealistic for his generation and upbringing.
A major plot point (Ellie's terror of birthing babies was left entirely unresolved, as was Ingeborg's sickness/weakness.
Content: a pretty detailed birth/nursing sequence; infant loss
Also—hey, if you don't want me to critique your historical details, don't research enough to toss in random “facts” that don't fit the time period—they order a Sears-Roebuck house. Great: except this book is supposed to be set in 1900, and Sears houses didn't start until 1908. Also, it comes with ready-cut wood, which was a feature first offered in 1916. Andrew worries about “ordering windows” but if he really got a house in a box, those were included. And he wouldn't have ordered a stove when he ordered the house? That was weird.
Next, who starts putting hay in a barn before the roof is done? And why didn't he use a metal roof instead of taking forever to split wood shakes in a region where wood is rare?
I'll be trying another of her books, but obviously I need more help than simple series order to find out where to start reading.