An Untamed Heart by Lauraine Snelling. Bethany House, 2013. 348p. (9780764202032) Series: Red River
of the North, Prequel
When I was done I jotted down a few quick thoughts before turning
out my light and one of those thoughts was it’s “almost as if this was a prequel
telling us Ingeborg’s story.” And I was completely right, I just didn’t know it.
Make sure you understand that this is a prequel before starting the book, because otherwise it’ll
really drag and you’ll dislike the ending – it’s such an abnormal romance novel
ending. But if you’re familiar with the series then I suspect you know what
happens.
Goodreads
Summary:
Twenty-year-old
Ingeborg Strand is certain she is destined to be an old maid. She's had several
suitors but none she deemed worthy of spending her life with. That is, until
she meets a university student from Oslo, and feelings stronger than friendship
begin to develop between them. But tragedy strikes, and the future begins to
look bleaker than ever.
Grief
settles heavily over Ingeborg, and her mother suggests that she leave Norway
and start afresh in America, as so many others have done before her. But how will
she accomplish that with little money and no one to accompany her?
It isn't
long before she meets Roald Bjorklund, a widower who has been planning to go to
America for some time, lured by the promise of free land. He's a good man, a
hard-working man--and he has a young son who desperately needs a mother. He's
clearly interested in Ingeborg, but is he the answer to her prayers? And what
about love? This isn't how she's always imagined it.
Ingeborg
Strand has a heartrending decision to make...
My Review:
I have not read
the Red River of the North series, I’m not familiar with them at all actually. Each book has a 4+ average rating on Goodreads, so they must be good. All that
to say I think it’d be better if you were familiar with the series before
reading this book.
I thought
the pace of the overall story was slow and steady except for Nils’ accidents,
but the speed of time passing varied quite a bit. The author lingered over the first
summer up at the seter and then the rest of year passed fairly quickly until
the next summer and that one flew by in a few paragraphs. And the conclusion felt rather sudden and some things never were resolved. (Example: Why did her mom seem to dislike her? I thought Ingeborg was making too big a deal over that at times, but the author kept bringing it up.)
When I
started the book it’d been a while since I read a summary or another blogger’s
review but my vague idea of what the book was about – Ingeborg possibly having
to marry a widower with a baby and go to America was very misleading. That
choice doesn’t arrive until the last few chapters and in the mean time we learn
a ton about Norwegian farming practices.
Which was
quite interesting but not what I was expecting. The explanations of cheese
making and life up at the seter were a bit too much in depth but it does give
you a very good idea of a farmer’s family’s life in Norway in the late 1800s.
In case you’re wondering, a seter is a cabin up in the mountains with fields nearby
for the sheep and cows to graze and the teens and kids live up there alone all
summer making cheese, sheering sheep, carding, spinning and weaving the wool, making
hay, and doing all the farm chores necessary to care for the sheep and
themselves. It reminded
me of Heidi’s grandfather’s home in the Alps in a way.
If you love
the Red River series then I’m guessing you’ll want to read this book, and if
you want to learn more about rural life in Norway in the 1800s this would be a
good choice.
Disclosure:
I received this book for free from the publisher via NetGalley. I was not
required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own.
I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission.
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