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A Mending at the Edge (Change and Cherish Historical Series #3)
Jane Kirkpatrick
WaterBrook Press
, 2008 - 416 pages
average customer review:
based on 7 reviews
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highly recommended
Fabulous Book
I have read the entire
series
of the
Change
,and
Cherish
Historical
Series. In this final book, Emma comes into her own. She has gained wisdom through her trials. She has lost many people along the way. In this book, she shacks free from danger, but there is a price to pay. I just loved this series, as I have all of Jane Kirckpatrick's books. But this one is different. I find myself drawn to Emma, maybe because I have been through several of her trials.
The intriguing conclusion to Jane Kirkpatrick's historical "Change and Cherish" series
A
MENDING
AT THE
EDGE satisfyingly
concludes Jane Kirkpatrick's
Change
and
Cherish trilogy
, based on the true-life story of Emma Wagner Giesy, a strong-willed woman who seeks to find her place in a restrictive Christian colony in Oregon during the mid-1800s.
If you haven't read the first two installments, stop here and begin with book one, A CLEARING IN THE WILD. These novels are much richer as a
series than
they are as stand-alones.
In A CLEARING IN THE WILD, we're introduced to Emma, a teenage girl in the Missouri Bethelites community who rebels against gender roles and longs for adventure. She wangles her way to accompany her husband, Christian Giesy, on a trip west to explore possible new locations for the colony ---
historical
ly, the only woman to help found a communal society in this time period, Kirkpatrick tells us.
The second novel in the series, A TENDERING IN THE STORM, is written from two points of view --- Louisa Keil's and Emma's. It finds the feisty Emma living in the Washington Territory with Christian and little ones Andy and Kate. Readers will enjoy seeing Emma's gifts unfold and watching her grow as a woman of faith and as a mother who deeply cares for her children. Her mistakes, however, will cost her dearly.
A MENDING AT THE EDGE finds Emma and her four young kids back with the repressive Bethel colony, after escaping from her abusive second husband Jack. Although offering her shelter and work at the colony, its mercurial and autocratic leader, Wilhelm Keil, is clear that Emma must do what she can to reconcile with Jack.
Kirkpatrick weaves information about women and divorce during this time period into the storyline, and continues her exploration of gender roles as she has throughout the series. Divorce, we discover, while not impossible, would likely result in Emma's dismissal from the colony. Divorced women of that time in Oregon also lost custody of their children, the author tells us.
However, as Emma labors in the colony and her work is credited towards the community for goods she wishes to acquire, Jack shows up and threatens to use his privileges as her husband to claim goods for himself that she has earned. And shockingly enough, the community does not protest, as he is her lawful husband. For the modern reader, Emma's situation and those of other characters introduced later in the story provide a startling realization of how women's rights were not protected in this era, and how little recourse females had if they were abused by their husbands. Kirkpatrick is a clinical social worker, as well as a novelist, which may explain her knowledgeable grasp of this plot thread.
Things smooth out a bit when Jack leaves, and Emma is free to press for the building of a home for herself and her family. However, to remain in the community, Emma finds that she must give up more than she ever dreamed. Will her sacrifice be worth the pain it will cause? Readers may find her decision shocking, but the author casts Emma's actions in the context of her time period, which aids understanding.
Kirkpatrick paints an intriguing portrait of a woman who chafes at the conventional and longs to live an extraordinary life. Emma's creativity is repeatedly stifled, but she finds ways to use conventional means (crafts, quilting) to express her gifts in unusual ways. Her impetuousness often has consequences, especially her unfortunate marriage to Jack, but she has matured since book one and learned patience and tact. These things help smooth her path as she finds a way to become a part of the colony yet remain true to herself. Emma also learns that even as she grieves the loss of family members she loves, she is able to reach out to others in need and help them heal.
I appreciated how Kirkpatrick helps the reader at every turn to understand the story, from the cast of characters at the beginning (an extensive number by book three) to the rich historical details, for which she includes a glossary of terms and German words used by the colony.
Readers fascinated with Emma's story will find information in the author's notes about the Western colony founded by German Americans as it is remembered today. Kirkpatrick notes that it is possible to visit the novel's historical village of Aurora (population 600) and the Colony Museum today. She has also written a nonfiction book about the colony, its quilts, music, food and culture that will be published in the fall of 2008.
Fans of the Change and Cherish series will appreciate A MENDING AT THE EDGE and the forthcoming nonfiction title, which provide more windows into this fascinating and sometimes shockingly restrictive community and this time period of the Old West.
--- Reviewed by Cindy Crosby
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Worth Reading
Emma Wagner Giesy has escaped from her abusive second husband, Jack, and she is going to the Oregon Territory to help found a communal society. But she isn't truly free. She is forced to live in Keil's house, Keil is the "commune" leader, who is married with children-but he is "BOSS" no one does anything without his permission. So since Emma is a woman she is not entitled to have her own home so she is forced to live in a small room with her four children in Keil's house until she "reconciles" with her abusive husband.
Emma works hard to support herself, but every penny she earns goes to her estranged abusive husband. A woman doesn't have any right to have any money of her own.
When Jack shows up at the commune, Emma is scared for her children's safely, and her own. After all, she hasn't completely healed from the last time Jack beat her. But Jack leaves the commune of his own free will, something Emma isn't allowed to do when her parents come out to the Oregon Territory.
Illness threatens the commune and Emma is forced to work harder than ever. When death comes calling, everything
change
s. But will they change for good?
A
Mending
at the
Edge
is based on a true story and is the third and final book in the Change and
Cherish
series
. At times the way the story is told, keeping me from being completely engaged in it, but knowing that this story is actually a
historical account
keep the pages turning. At the end of the book, author Kirkpatrick shares where she got all her information, and fills in some of the missing pieces to the best of her ability.
I never did fully connect with Emma, but I did feel sympathetic toward her plight--a woman, in a man's world, separated from her abusive husband, yet everything she had and would get would always belong to that husband. I hoped things would work out for her.
Armchair Interviews says: Discussion questions are included at the end of the book useful for book clubs.
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Historical Fiction
Jane Kirkpatrick has done it again! This is a wonderful story woven into Oregon history and is a joy to read. The characters come alive and stay in your heart long after the last page is read.
Don't Miss This One
Don't miss this lovely conclusion to the
Change
and
Cherish
series
. A
Mending
at the
Edge honors
the American West and the roles of women who endured the hardships of the trail. This novel will inspire readers to choose hope in life. This reader highly recommends A Mending at the Edge. And be sure to read books #1 and #2 so you can learn more about Emma.
reviews
:
page 1
,
2
?Of all the things I left in Willapa, hope is what I missed the most.?
So begins this story of one woman?s restoration from personal grief to the meaning of community. Based on the life of German-American Emma Wagner Giesy, the only woman sent to the Oregon Territory in the 1850s to help found a communal society, award-winning author Jane Kirkpatrick shows how landscape, relationships, spirituality and artistry poignantly reflect a woman?s desire to weave a unique and meaningful legacy from the threads of an ordinary life. While set in the
historical past
, it?s a story for our own time answering the question: Can threads of an isolated life weave a legacy of purpose in community?
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