Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


housemaid's daughter-pbkmech.inddBook Description:

When Cathleen Harrington leaves her home in Ireland in 1919 to travel to South Africa, she is uncertain about her feelings for the man she is to marry there—her fiancé Edward, whom she has not seen for five years.  Feeling isolated and estranged at Cradock House, her new home is in a small town in the harsh Karoo desert; her only real companions are her diary, her housemaid, Miriam, and later the housemaid’s daughter, Ada.

Although she finds herself in a passionless marriage, Cathleen perseveres and gives birth to two children, her cheerful son, Philip, and her ill-tempered daughter, Rosemary.  However, over the years, it is Ada with whom Cathleen forms a unique, powerful bond.  While Cathleen’s own daughter complains that she hates to play her mother’s beloved piano, Ada thrives on Cathleen’s tutelage and becomes an accomplished pianist.  Besides sharing a love of music, Cathleen teaches Ada to read, despite the objections of Edward.  Ada often peeks into Cathleen’s diary, and learns the secrets of her heart.

Encouraged by Cathleen, Ada sees new possibilities for her own life.  But one night, while Cathleen is away on a trip, Edward takes advantage of teenaged Ada with devastating results. When Cathleen arrives home, she finds that Ada has disappeared.  No longer living in the security of Cradock House, Ada is now forced to survive amidst the harsh realities of apartheid.  She struggles to make a life for herself.  In time, she must also fight to keep her biracial baby daughter safe.  As time passes, Cathleen’s attempts to find Ada fail time and again.  She remains confused and heartbroken by Ada’s mysterious departure until one day when a piano’s music brings Cathleen to a starting discovery.

Narrated in the compelling voice of Ada, as well as Cathleen through her diary passages, THE HOUSEMAID’S DAUGHTER is a breathtaking and thought-provoking novel about the parallel lives of these two women whose poignant relationship rises above the turbulence of the period.  It is a stunning story that is certain to resonate with readers everywhere.

My Thoughts:

Cathleen Harrington is a burndon on her big family in Ireland.  There are just some many mouths to feed.  She leaves home to meet up with her fiancé Edward.  Once there, she has no friends, just Edward and their maid, Miriam.  She becomes friends with Miriam, even though she is not only black, but also pregnant, out of wedlock.

When Ada is born, she dotes on her, perhaps even more than her own children.  She wants Ada to attend school but Edward thinks it will “cause problems later”.  So, she teaches Ada herself.  Ada turns out to be a good student, unlike Kathleen’s daughter, Rosemary.  One day when Rosemary is practicing piano, Kathleen hears that her playing much better and can’t believe her ears.  However, when she goes to look, it is Ada playing.  So, she decides right away to teach her how to play.

Piano becomes the most important thing in Ada’s life, except for perhaps Philip, Kathleen’s son.  However, he has to go off and fight in WWII.

A bit later in the book, Ada disappears and Kathleen looks for her.  Meanwhile, apartheid is getting harsher and harsher by the day.

I can’t say anymore with the risk of big spoilers.

Set against the backdrop of Karoo, a small town in South Africa, The Housemaid’s Daughter is a beautifully written story of a white Madam and her close relationship with her housemaid’s daughter, Ada.  Barbara Mutch has well developed characters and she captures the harsh setting of both the land and realities of the time.  Her poetic prose is spot on.  I give this 5+ stars!

5/5

I received a ebook copy of this book for my honest opinion!

(c)Dawson Strange Photography

(c)Dawson Strange Photography

About Barbara Mutch:

BARBARA MUTCH was born and raised in South Africa, the granddaughter of Irish immigrants. She is married with two sons and divides her time between Cape Town and London.

Thanks to Brittani Hilles of St. Martin Press, I am giving away one print copy.  This giveaway is open to Canada and the U.S. only and ends on February 10, 2015.  Please use Rafflecopter to enter.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Mrs LincolnBook Description:

Kate Chase Sprague was born in 1840 in Cincinnati, Ohio, the second daughter to the second wife of a devout but ambitious lawyer. Her father, Salmon P. Chase, rose to prominence in the antebellum years and was appointed secretary of the treasury in Abraham Lincoln’s cabinet, while aspiring to even greater heights.

Beautiful, intelligent, regal, and entrancing, young Kate Chase stepped into the role of establishing her thrice-widowed father in Washington society and as a future presidential candidate. Her efforts were successful enough that The Washington Star declared her “the most brilliant woman of her day. None outshone her.”

None, that is, but Mary Todd Lincoln. Though Mrs. Lincoln and her young rival held much in common—political acumen, love of country, and a resolute determination to help the men they loved achieve greatness—they could never be friends, for the success of one could come only at the expense of the other. When Kate Chase married William Sprague, the wealthy young governor of Rhode Island, it was widely regarded as the pinnacle of Washington society weddings. President Lincoln was in attendance. The First Lady was not.

Jennifer Chiaverini excels at chronicling the lives of extraordinary yet little known women through historical fiction. What she did for Elizabeth Keckley in Mrs. Lincoln’s Dressmaker and for Elizabeth Van Lew in The Spymistress she does for Kate Chase Sprague in Mrs. Lincoln’s Rival.

My Thoughts:

I love books with strong female characters and Kate Chase fits the bill.  Her father is widowed for the third time and his daughter, Kate takes over the role of a wife, as far as helping him with his presence in Washington Society.

Kate organizes dinners to help her father’s political efforts and goes with him to political functions.  She always gives her opinions and advise to her father and he often takes her advice.  She is quite savvy in politics.   Though he wasn’t able to get elected as president, as he had hoped, he was Abraham Lincoln’s secretary of treasury.  In part, due to Kate.

Though Kate and Mrs. Lincoln had much in common, they were not friends but rivals.

I believe if Kate was alive today she would be a successful female politician!  Instead she falls into the same fate as most women of her time.  She is expected to marry, raise a family and tolerate her husbands’ mistreatment.

Though I did enjoy the book, some of it became a bit repetitive and tiresome.  I think some of the book could have been tightened up with some more editing.  Some parts of the book really captured my attention yet some, I just wanted to end.

I am glad I read ‘Mrs. Lincoln’s Rival’ to get to know who Kate Chase Sprague was in U.S. history.

3/5

I received the ebook version for my honest review.

About Jennifer Chiaverini:

Jennifer Chiaverini is the author of ten Elm Creek Quilts novels and An Elm Creek Quilts Sampler and An Elm Creek Quilts Album, as well as Elm Creek Quilts and Return to Elm Creek, two collections of quilt projects inspired by the series, and is the designer of the Elm Creek Quilts fabric lines from Red Rooster fabrics. She lives with her husband and two sons in Madison, Wisconsin.

SomersetBook Description:

One hundred fifty years of Roses‘ Tolivers, Warwicks, and DuMonts! We begin in the antebellum South on Plantation Alley in South Carolina, where Silas Toliver, deprived of his inheritance, joins up with his best friend Jeremy Warwick to plan a wagon train expedition to the “black waxy” promise of a new territory called Texas.

Slavery, westward expansion, abolition, the Civil War, love, marriage, friendship, tragedy and triumph-all the ingredients (and much more) that made so many love Roses so much-are here in abundance.

My Thoughts:

I love both historical fiction and family sagas and ‘Somerset has them both.  Silas Toliver’s brother inherited the family plantation which has left Silas as pretty much just a worker there with no title.  When opportunity comes for him to put together a wagon train to Texas, with his best friend, Jeremy Warwick, they decide to do it.  If they make it there, it means free land and a fresh start at building their own plantations.  However, first Silas must raise some funds for the trip.

Meanwhile, Jessica Carson, the daughter of a plantation owner, is helping slaves to escape to freedom, until she is caught.  Her father gives her an a ultimatum.  He also give Silas an offer that is hard to refuse but if he accepts, he will be forced to marry Jessica instead of his fiancé.

Somerset is the prequel to the bestselling book ‘Roses’.  I have had ‘Roses’ on my tbr for a long time.  I usually don’t enjoy prequels to books I have read.  I prefer to read in chronological order, so reading Somerset first made perfect sense to me.  I am really glad I read it!

Somerset is a great historical saga.  It capture the time and place beautifully.  The lush working plantations in the south and the drama within, the action/adventure of the wagon train journey to the west, a budding romance, and the set up and running in a new land, Texas.  It has it all!  There is really something for everyone.  Highly recommended!  I hope to finally read ‘Roses’ in 2015.

5/5

I received the ebook version from Net Galley for my honest review.