Book Description
In Westerville, Ohio, 1855, Kate Winter
is a painfully shy student at Otterbein College, one of the first
colleges to accept female students. Due to a difficult mother and
perpetually drunk father Kate wants nothing more than to escape her
home.
Ben Hanby, Otterbein's musical genius,
is intrigued by Kate and longs to uncover her hidden mysteries, but
at the same time hopes no one will uncover his secret, that he is
working with the Underground Railroad.
When invited to accompany Ben, his
mother, and two mutual acquaintances, to Cincinnati, Kate sees this
as the perfect opportunity to escape, but instead finds herself
aiding in the escape of a slave family. Kate returns home, but can't
seem to get the slaves, or Ben, out of her mind or her heart.
My Thoughts
This was a very good, historically
sound story. I loved how both Ben and Kate refused to let others
beliefs about slavery sway them from their stand against the
injustice, and how they put others needs above theirs.
From the description on the back of the
book I was expecting it to be focused almost completely on music, but
instead slavery seemed to be the center, with music as a side. Kate
and Ben's romance was cute even though it was hindered slightly by
Kate's mother's disapproval. I liked how even though they both wanted
to marry, they trusted that if God wanted the marriage to take place,
He would make a way.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and look
forward to reading more by this author.
I received this book free from the publisher through the BookSneeze®.com book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own.
2 comments:
Abbi, I'm so glad you liked it! Thank you for taking the time to write a thoughtful review.
Wow Rosslyn thanks for stopping by! I did really enjoy this book and it made me quite interested in reading Fairer Than Morning-keep up the good work!
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