The Fire and the Ore

The Fire and the Ore

  • Downloads:1386
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-09-03 08:21:39
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Olivia Hawker
  • ISBN:B09KLLGPFV
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

Three spirited wives in nineteenth-century Utah。 One husband。 A compelling novel of family, sisterhood, and survival by the Washington Post bestselling author of One for the Blackbird, One for the Crow。

1856。 Three women—once strangers—come together in unpredictable Utah Territory。 Hopeful, desperate, and willful, they’ll allow nothing on earth or in Heaven to stand in their way。

Following the call of their newfound Mormon faith, Tamar Loader and her family weather a brutal pilgrimage from England to Utah, where Tamar is united with her destined husband, Thomas Ricks。 Clinging to a promise for the future, she abides an unexpected surprise: Thomas is already wedded to one woman—Tabitha, a local healer—and betrothed to still another。

Orphaned by tragedy and stranded in the Salt Lake Valley, Jane Shupe struggles to provide for herself and her younger sister。 She is no member of the Mormon migration, yet Jane agrees to marry Thomas。 Out of necessity, with no love lost, she too must bear the trials of a sister-wife。

But when the US Army’s invasion brings the rebellious Mormon community to heel, Tamar, Jane, and Tabitha are forced to retreat into the hostile desert wilderness with little in common but the same man—and the resolve to keep themselves and their children alive。 What they discover, as one, is redemption, a new definition of family, and a bond stronger than matrimony that is tested like never before。

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Reviews

Karen Heenan

The Fire and the Ore is yet another book by Olivia Hawker that teaches me more American history than I ever learned in school, and keeps me interested every step of the way。The book covers a painful era of wagon and handcart trains of Mormon pioneers heading west to the Great Salt Lake, something I’d never read about before in or out of school。 Between their shabby treatment by the US government (some of it deserved), the occasional ineptitude of their leaders, the belief that faith would sustai The Fire and the Ore is yet another book by Olivia Hawker that teaches me more American history than I ever learned in school, and keeps me interested every step of the way。The book covers a painful era of wagon and handcart trains of Mormon pioneers heading west to the Great Salt Lake, something I’d never read about before in or out of school。 Between their shabby treatment by the US government (some of it deserved), the occasional ineptitude of their leaders, the belief that faith would sustain them, no matter the hardship, and something as simple—and lethal—as weather, it’s a wonder any of them ever made it to Utah。 This makes the Donner party sound like a picnic 。From the first pages, the reader is dropped into the very disparate lives of three women: Tamar, a young, well-born Londoner whose father’s enthusiastic faith brought the family across the ocean; Jane, a teenage girl caring for her younger sister, and facing one disaster after another; and Tabitha, a healer and the wife of prominent Mormon Thomas Ricks。How these three deal with the hardships of life on the trail and further difficulties brought upon them by weather, politics, men, and their own faith, is the structure of this novel, but the heart of it is family –the kind you are born to, the kind you choose, or the kind you come to against your will。 This was a fascinating, well-written historical novel, of the sort I expect from this author, whose books I will buy no matter the subject。I received an advance copy of this book from the author in exchange for an unbiased review。 。。。more