George has a hard time dealing with his farm and his four children after the death of his wife. When the ladies at his church raise money for a mail order bride for him, he doesn’t argue with them. He needs a caretaker for his family. Millie has a short time to find her own way in the world before she is kicked out of the orphanage where she was raised. George’s letter about his requirements for a bride fit in all ways but one. Will her lie keep them apart even after they’re married?
Millie
is an orphan whose turning 18. She’s going to be thrown out of the orphanage so
she is given a stack of letters from men looking for a mail-order bride.
George
Stevens is a widower with four children. He’s been relying on the ladies of the
church for meals since his wife’s death. So busybody, Agnes Sims takes it upon
herself to host a bake sell and use the earnings to buy George a mail-order
bride.
Umm,
welllllll, umm, this book had potential.
The author could have done so many amazingly wonderful things with the
widower-reluctantly-receives-mail-order-bride plotline, but, sadly, the book
fell short of my expectations.
Millie
is young—she has just turned 18—but in the 1800’s 18 year-old’s didn’t act as
childish and naïve as she does throughout the novel. When she picks George’s
letter, she has this outlandish and fairytaleish way of thinking.
She had George
pictured in her mind. He would be tall with blond hair and blue eyes. He would
take one look at her and know he’d made the best decision of his life by
sending for her. He’d hire someone else to farm, so they could spend all their
day together, going on long walks and gazing into each other’s eyes.
Sure
he will…Needless to say her fairytale was short lived when she arrived at the
wedding after having been scrubbed within an inch of her life only to see her
groom standing at the alter clad in dirty work clothes.
George
didn’t want a wife. He wasn’t ready to move on so soon after the death of his
wife but he needed someone to mother his children, clean his pigsty of a house,
and cook.
I
was expecting him to be a little gruff or standoffish—that I would have loved—but
he was so much worse than that. He was verbally abusive. He was constantly
scolding Millie like she was his child rather than his wife. I really wanted to
wallop him with a cast iron skillet.
Granted
Millie a younger wife than what he wanted, but the poor woman cleaned, cooked,
and tended his children and he still had the nerve to tell her he didn’t think
she would make a good wife or mother because of her age.
If
I was Millie, I would have hitched a ride on the next stagecoach or, for that
matter, even the Pony Express would have been better than staying and actually
developing feelings for a man like that.
The
plot itself was lackluster. Rather than focusing on Millie’s growing (and somewhat
disturbing) relationship with George, the plot focused on Millie cleaning and
cooking as well as her growing faith.
It
also suffered from a bad case of repetition. Every time Millie cooked something,
she would say the recipe came from cook at the orphanage, yeah, you said it
once, the book wasn’t that long, we can remember. It also needed to be smoothed
out and edited. The baby in the book had
several name switches. First, she was Grace, then she was Hope, then she was
Grace again. Then the eldest sister, Patience, was called Grace.
Overall,
I felt as though I was reading a rough draft of a story that didn’t meet it’s
potential.
Book Details
Title: Mail Order
Homespun Book 1
Homespun Book 1
Author: Katie Crabapple
ASIN: B007SAKW9E
Release Date: Sep 23, 2013
Format: E-book
How I Read It: Purchased via Amazon
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