The Lumber Baron's Wife by Lynn Austin
Kroosreadsandreviews:
What a fascinating story!
I loved that the story was told from three different points of view and in the past and present day.
The reader will cheer with the highs of the story and scream in frustration at the lows in the story.
I loved how each of the three women had extremely difficult circumstances that they tried to rise above. I also enjoyed how Hannah and Kate had each other and Freida and Ashley had each other for support.
The struggles that each of the main characters had with their faith amidst the trials was intriguing to me as well.
Thanks to netgalley and the publisher for the arc. The opinions are my own.
What it's about:
1873. After a devastating loss, Hannah Wagner never imagined she’d leave her comfortable home for the harsh, unfamiliar wilderness near Lake Michigan. But when Henry Abernathy—a friend of her husband, John—offers them a fresh start in a booming lumber town, where John’s skills as a doctor are sorely needed, Hannah reluctantly agrees. There, she meets Kate, Henry’s spirited, much younger wife. Kate’s sharp tongue and outsider status have made her unwelcome among the town’s elite, and when she begins confiding in Hannah, it’s clear her marriage is not what it seems . . . and that a secret from her past could destroy everything.
Present day. Ashley Gilbert never planned to settle in Michigan, but when her husband lands his dream job as a conservationist, she agrees to follow. While restoring their historic home—built in the 19th century for a doctor and his wife—Ashley becomes captivated by its past and its connection to the nearby Abernathy mansion, now being transformed into a museum. While volunteering with the restoration, she stumbles upon the unsolved mystery of Kate Abernathy’s disappearance. What begins as curiosity soon becomes a quest for the truth—one that will connect her to two women whose stories and struggles echo and inspire her own.
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