Tag Archives: Review

The Mapmaker’s Children {a Review}

I love historical fiction….seriously, if I had to choose only one genre to read for the rest of my life historical fiction would be it! I’m of two min9780385348904ds regarding historical fictions {or any story} that jumps timelines…sometimes it’s really well done and sometimes it just leaves me confused {as I was when reading All the Light We Cannot See}.

The Mapmaker’s Children is the story of Sarah Brown {daughter of abolitionist John Brown}, and the modern-day story of Eden Anderson. At first I wasn’t sure I was liking the story line for Anderson, I wasn’t sure where it was fitting in with the Civil War era story line. Once you realize that you’re not supposed to understand the crossover, that it is meant as a mystery, it becomes fantastic!

I loved both story lines: Brown’s for the historical aspect and Eden’s for the struggles that she was dealing with {particularly infertility}. I’ve never done any in depth study of John Brown, other than the paragraph in my high school textbooks. It was really interesting to learn different aspects of the Underground Railroad. I was, of course, familiar of the use of quilts, but McCoy tells of a whole different way in which every day items were used.

As for the overall book and writing: I really enjoyed it! The character’s were well developed, the plot was interesting, and the whole book was generally well written. The whole mystery story line was fascinating to me; having the two stories pulled together was wonderful. I was so glad that she didn’t end Eden’s story the way so many writers would have…it was much more realistic.

Definitely worth a read if you’re a lover of the Civil War! I will also be checking out Sarah McCoy’s other books from the library.

I received this book for free from the BloggingforBooks.com program, the review is entirely my own opinion. You can read my disclosure policy here.

 

One More Step {a Review}

There are days, weeks when taking another step makes me want to scream into a pillow. The very thought of another sibling fight, another meal to be cooked, another life issue to be dealt with makes me want to leave my life at the kitchen table and walk out the front door, never to return.

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Life is hard. Sometimes, the thought of taking another step is daunting, another step in faith feels impossible. Because why did God call me to THIS mess, when someone else’s seems so much tidier?

A couple of months ago I requested to review Rachel Wojo‘s One More Step: Finding Strength When You Feel Like Giving Up, and then it sat on the shelf, because life was becoming too much and reading a book was impossible. With the new year I was determined to clean up the book reviews remaining from the old. I planned on just “getting through this” as best I could.

Sitting on a last minute flight I managed to read over half of One More Step; I sipped tentatively at it’s pages, before taking life giving gulps from it. Logically we know that other people “get it” that we’re not the only ones struggling through life, but we need that reminder so often. One More Step is that reminder.

Rachel Wojo shares about her struggles as a single mom to a terminally ill little girl and her journey to and through marriage and becoming a mom of many, while struggling through the loss of her own mother. She talks candidly about her frustrations, her anger with God, and her continual struggle to deal with life and releasing it to God over and over again.

At the end of each chapter Rachel shares a few Bible verses, Pillars of Truth, as well as a Stepping Stones…questions for you to think about and record in a prayer journal. Rachel does a fantastic job of sharing her knowledge and giving you the tools you need to discover for yourself how to take that next step.

Whether you feel like you’re lost at a dead end or just looking for how to avoid burning out, this book is book will help you unravel the rats’ nest of chaos that’s presiding in your life.

*I received this book for free from BloggingforBooks.com in exchange for my honest opinion. You can find my disclosure policy here.