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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
37 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Perfect "Covered Wagon" Story!!!!,
By
This review is from: The Diary of Mattie Spenser (Paperback)
Sometimes your lucky day strikes and you come upon a novel that meets all your favorite topics and interests. This book was recommended to me by another Amazon.com reviewer that understood my passion for this era and took advantage of what this site has to offer to get in touch with me. Ever since my mother passed along _Jubilee Trail_ by Gwen Bristow, I have been fascinated by the 1850's and the journey and homesteading of the western lands. While the stories of many books I have read were well done, I still wished to learn more of the everyday issues and how they managed to make do in such difficult settings. It is very evident that the author, Sandra Dallas, researched her work, for you will be delighted to learn specifics of how these men and women lived, loved, made their home and raised their children. It is a difficult time, the end of the civil war has taken it's toll on the north and south. Men are looking to making a livelihood and forget the horrors of the war. The story centers around Mattie, a young woman who marries Luke and moves to Colorado. There, Luke challenges the land hoping to farm, and Mattie works hard to make a home in their sod house. She becomes pregnant immediately and must deliver her first child in the company of men. Mattie and Luke's marriage is stable, but Luke has some secrets and over the years Mattie discovers them. Other men see the beauty and strength in Mattie, for she is a fine lady and well respected. She easily fits in the group of men, as they discuss the issues of farming, indian revolts and homesteading. It is a very difficult life as the indians are a constant threat, alternating the kidnapping of women and children with outright murdur. Food and provisions are scarce and the risks of disease are a constant fear. Their days are long and the work is hard. There are few luxuries. A long forgotten piece of chocolate fallen into the corner of their traveling trunk serves as a treat to be scavenged and eaten. The reader is astonished at the strength these people had to have to survive in such stark and barren land. You will be pleased with the details and even more so with the plot of the story. Travel to the big city, Denver City and learn what it was like to stay in the hotel and explore the city. It is a wonderful book and I hated to come to the last page. You will, too.
19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a great read!!!!!!,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Diary of Mattie Spenser (Paperback)
After reading "These Is My Words" I found "The Diary of Mattie Spenser", another book in diary format. How lucky I was to take a chance and order this from Amazon! It was a very good read and made me stop all my other projects and read this book! I only hope Sandra Dallas has more books to come. The "Persian Pickle Club" by Sandra Dallas was also a good book.
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Author of Breath-taking Skill,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Diary of Mattie Spenser (Paperback)
Sandra Dallas can number me among her devoted fans. I haven't read anything yet from her that I haven't admired. And I delighted in THE DIARY OF MATTIE SPENSER; couldn't put it down.As always with a book by Ms. Dallas, she has researched thoroughly so that her readers can truly understand the time and the place in which she sets her story. MATTIE opens with the pioneers on the wagon train to what was then the Colorado Territory. Most of the story then unfolds on the prairie where this new bride and her husband settle. This was a place so isolated and so bleak that we now know it drove many women, and a few men, to madness. Certainly, we understand these hardships as we sit in our warm homes, reading under the light of a good lamp. But seeing the hardships spelled out, as Dallas does here, reminds us of the extent of the woes that these people endured, and the stoicism with which they accepted their realities. Indian attacks, isolation, no plumbing, heat, light, medicine, plus childbirth fever...well, we now have a lot for which to be thankful. And the distance that, as a population, we have moved in just a century is highlighted by this diary. Part of Dallas' skill is that she always inhabits her characters so perfectly, giving them their voices. Mattie, as Dallas writes her, is a woman of extraordinary virtues. Decent, educated, kind and capable, she accepts her bridegroom's choices and defines the old-fashioned concept of "helpmate." Like all of Ms. Dallas' novels, this story pivots on a terrible secret, the worst secret she has written to date. I must admit that I was upset with the outcome here, though I cannot see how the diary could have ended in any other way. Still, Mattie's decision is thought-provoking in terms of today's women, and it highlights how far women have come in terms of both our rights and our freedoms within society. I admired the concept of writing this story in the form of diary entries. Since Ms. Dallas apparently is a leading expert on Colorado frontier history, I cannot help wondering how much of MATTIE may be fact-based. Truth or fiction, it doesn't matter. THE DIARY OF MATTIE SPENSER is a wonderful book that will stay with its admirers for years after it first is read.
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