About the Book
Book: Laura’s Shadow
Author: Allison Pittman
Genre: Christian/Historical/Romance
Release date: August 1, 2022
Family Secrets Spill One Conversation at a Time
Visit historic American landmarks through the Doors to the Past series. History and today collide in stories full of mystery, intrigue, faith, and romance.
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I loved the Little House on the Prairie show growing up and
though I have not read the book series yet, this story that tied with Laura Ingalls
Intrigued me. Here we meet Mariah Patterson who was one of Laura’s students
when Laura first started teaching. She watched, as a fourteen-year-old girl, her
teacher Laura ride away with her love Almonzo. This was a romance she craved. Now years later Mariah loves a
man whom she knows will never love her back. She knows this because he has told
her and because he is still in love with Laura Ingalls Wilder, even though his
good friend Almonzo married her. Then Mariah makes a fateful choice that will
change her life forever.
Fast forward to the 1970’s and we have another girl, Trixie
Gowan who is making her way in the world as far as she could get from her hometown
and country life. Working at a newspaper and writing a comic strip, she is
getting ready to get a big break when her great-grandmother needs her. She
needs to tell Trixie her story. Trixie’s great-grandmother is Mariah, and she
wants to tell her story of what it was like living in Laura’s shadow and the family secrets that follow.
This is at times a heartbreaking and witty novel. I liked
seeing through the eyes of another character that knew Laura, if for a brief
time. There is romance and Trixie must decide whom she will embrace. I liked how
the author brought breath and life to a lesser-known character and what her
life might have been like. This was a very unique story.
I was provided a copy of this novel from the publisher. I
was not required to post a positive review and all views and opinions are my
own.
About the Author
More from Allison
I can credit Laura Ingalls Wilder for just about every aspect of my identity. I’m a reader because I read her books over and over and over again, checking them out from my little elementary school library. I can still see them—last bookcase, bottom shelf. During the summer, I checked them out from the Bookmobile, and one magical Christmas, I received my own set. The well-worn, yellow paperbacks have a place of honor in my office: top shelf, center stage. It was amazing to my eight-year-old self that I could pick up Little House in the Big Woods, skip the dull parts, and jump straight to These Happy Golden Years in a single afternoon.
Looking at Laura’s writing now (as I often do), I realize I spent my childhood absorbing the art of telling a story. Her books masterfully string meaningful vignettes within an over-arching conflict. She creates stories-within-a-story-within-a-story whenever Pa launches into a tall tale, and minor characters come to life no matter how brief their appearance. (Aunt Docia, anyone?)
When I first came up with the concept of writing a story set in the world of Laura Ingalls Wilder, I knew I couldn’t bring Laura herself in as a character. There’s a sacredness to her story, and I wouldn’t dream of inserting myself into the cannon of her pages. But—I thought—surely she had peers who grew up alongside her, classmates who also hated Miss Wilder, young men who might have set their own cap for her, townsfolk who remembered the vibrant young woman with the button-brown eyes and dark curls. And then I pondered further: maybe there was another side to Laura—a side that she kept from the romanticized ideal skipping through the pages of her books. My first thought was to create a fictional De Smet town girl, but then…
In researching and reading Pioneer Girl, The Annotated Autobiography of Laura Ingalls Wilder, I came across a bit of information that brought the story to life for me. In These Happy Golden Years, Laura teaches her first class: five students, two families. And while the “Brewster” children are documented in other sources, the Harrison children are not. There are no census records, land deeds, or any official documents to support the identity of Charles and Martha as they are depicted in the novel. And so, it clicked. If Laura could fictionalize these people, well, then, so could I. Thus Martha Harrison was lifted from those pages, renamed Mariah, and given a new life and a new story in mine.
Writing Laura’s Shadow allowed me to indulge in a few favorite directions. First, I’m fascinated with the idea of extreme longevity (showcased in my novel All for a Song) and creating a character whose lifespan stretches from homesteading to disco was delightful. My Mariah chafes at the romanticized depiction of pioneer life, telling us in her old age that it was really more of a daily struggle for survival. I also enjoyed exploring the family dynamic of four generations of women and how each generation faced the same battles and fought them so, so differently. Finally—and this is what truly speaks to my fourth-grade self…
You know that Elton John song, “Your Song” with the lyrics, “I hope you don’t mind that I put down in words…” Well, I got to put down in words my lifelong crush on Cap Garland. Sure, Almonzo is great and everything, but I always thought Cap was more exciting. More fun. More…more. Bringing him to life in this book set my old heart racing. My research for this novel took me to De Smet, and to his gravesite, where I spoke this story to his stone. I like to think he’d approve, and I hope all of the Laura fans will join me in this tale and let their imaginations run wild.
Blog Stops
Happily
Managing a Household of Boys, August 30
Debbie’s
Dusty Deliberations, August 30
Babbling Becky L’s
Book Impressions , August 31
Texas Book-aholic,
August 31
Genesis 5020,
September 1
Inklings
and notions, September 1
The
Avid Reader, September 2
For Him and My
Family, September 2
deb’s Book
Review, September 3
Simple Harvest
Reads, September 3 (Guest Review from Mindy Houng)
Locks, Hooks
and Books, September 4
Blogging With
Carol, September 4
Betti Mace,
September 5
Ashley’s
Clean Book Reviews, September 5
Blossoms
and Blessings, September 6
Jeanette’s Thoughts,
September 6
lakesidelivingsite,
September 7
Abba’s
Prayer Warrior Princess, September 7
Connie’s
History Classroom, September 8
Mary Hake,
September 8
Truth and Grace
Homeschool Academy, September 9
Through
the Fire Blogs, September 9
Tell Tale Book
Reviews, September 10
Bigreadersite,
September 11
Pause for
Tales, September 11
For the
Love of Literature, September 12
Labor Not in
Vain, September 12
Remembrancy,
September 13
To Everything
There Is A Season, September 13
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Allison is giving away the grand prize package of a $25 Amazon E-gift card and a copy of the book!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/210cb/laura-s-shadow-celebration-tour-giveaway
This book sounds like a very good read!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading how the author came up with the idea for the character of Mariah. Laura's Shadow is definitely a book for the TBR list.
ReplyDelete