![]() There is also crypto-Mormonism in this book, which is kind of weirdly neat. There was a theme of children left alone to wander in the wilderness that probably came either from the Bible or the Book of Mormon. But she will also experience unexpected friendship and love. As her contracted year of employment goes on, Julia will experience the dangers of frontier life: the cold, the isolation, the lack of respect for fancy cooking, the brutal range wars between the ranchers and homesteaders, and the prejudices local people have against Mormons. Her new employer, Paul Otto, has a somewhat mysterious past, and Julia is the only ranch employee who doesn't seem to be an outcast or misfit of some sort. This is the story of Julia Darling of Salt Lake City, graduate of the Fannie Farmer cooking school of Boston, who dumps her calculating fiance and goes to Wyoming to be a cook on a ranch. ![]() Now, I'm not Mormon, so the Mormon-y bits of this book were a bit over my head, but the underlying spiritual development of the characters in the book is probably common in any religion. I've always liked Kelly's regencies, so when I heard she had written an inspirational romance, I was naturally curious as how that would work. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |