Book 2 of the Fairlawn series and just as good as book 1! Can't wait for book 3!
Book 2 picks up where book 1 leaves off.. and that makes writing the review difficult because there are so many things that happen in book 1 that would spoil it if I shared.. but they are pivotal to book 2. (Got all that!?)
Let's see.. Jennifer and family are still in FL and the funeral home is up and running. Jennifer is making a life / career change.. the kids are adjusting.. and romance is in the air.. but then so is formaldehyde! Jennifer is in need of a friend and she finds one in McLane. A pregnant young woman waiting for her soldier husband to return from overseas... hopefully before the baby arrives. As Jennifer and McLane's friendship grows, Jennifer learns a truth that shakes her to the core and McLane is faced with a life or death decision.
Another beautiful story by Hunt. Real life.. real faith.. and a bit of fun tossed in.
This is an excellent series! Review of number 3 coming soon! (got to read it first!)
Showing posts with label the South. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the South. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
The Swan House by Elizabeth Musser

I have never read anything by Elizabeth Musser, but was intrigued when I saw The Swan House on the new fiction rack at my local library. From the synopsis, I thought it would be a sweet tale of a young girl working through a loss and learning to help others along the way. And it is all that... and more.
The Swan House is set in 1962 Atlanta. Mary Swan Middleton, age 16, lives in all white Buckhead.. the daughter of high society and wealth. Tragedy shatters her world and Mary Swan looses her way. The family suggests Mary Swan reach out to help others in her grief and so she finds herself in the lower income inner city neighborhood of Grant Park dishing up free spaghetti dinners on Saturday mornings. While there Mary Swan is forced to see the realities of the world... the realities that have been hidden from her.
As one might expect, prejudice is a big issue in this book. What I love is how it is handled. Musser doesn't just look at racism... she looks at other forms of prejudice which are just as prevalent in our world. Whether it is due to faith... gender... social status... financial condition.. mental health... or skin color... there are many forms of prejudice.
I also love that Musser doesn't paint a black and white picture (no pun intended). She shows all the various shades of gray found in life. Yes,bigotry and fear exists... believe it or not some folks or so use to it that they don't even realize they are prejudiced... and there is bigotry on all sides.... but in the midst of it all, Musser also paints a glowing picture of the love and grace we, as believers, are called to pour out of all those around us.
This is an excellent book that handles a very real problem from our past... and one that still plagues us today... in a very well thought out and thorough way.
Labels:
1960s,
Atlanta,
Christian Fiction,
Elizabeth Musser,
prejudice,
the South
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