Barnabas Sackett is a cool dude, though, and no mistake. You just can't keep him down. He refuses to be daunted. And I loved that. I also loved a new character in this one: Lila, the maid to Barabas's intended. She can swordfight and shoot a rifle, ride a horse all day and all night, cook so well that men will mutiny on her behalf, and is generally a completely awesome person. I wish there was a book about her all on her own, because I bet it would be a roaringly good time.
Once again, Barnabas Sackett spends the bulk of this book just trying to get to America and set up a home there. Which he does, eventually, but not before multiple shipboard battles, kidnappings, treasure hunts, and so on. He and his wife do eventually build a home together, have kids, and raise those kids to adulthood. But it takes quite a while to get there.
Particularly Good Bits:
We must not lose touch with what we were, with what we had been, nor must we allow the well of our history to dry up, for a child without tradition is a child crippled before the world. Tradition can also be an anchor of stability and a shield to guard one from irresponsibility and hasty decision (p. 21).
I had never complained, for who cares for complaints? If something is wrong, one does something (p. 64).
"I do not wish. I do what becomes the moment. If it be a cook-pot, I cook. If it be a needle, I'll sew, but if it be a blade that is needed, I shall cut a swath" (p. 76). (That's Lila, btw. Precisely what I love about her, really!)
"The tongue of Wales is music, and you write it well" (p. 84).
How deep, how strange is the courage of women! Courage is expected of a man, he is conditioned to it from childhood, and we in our time grew up in a world of wars and press-gangs, of highwaymen and lords sometimes as high-handed as they. We grew up to expect hardship and war. But a woman? I'd seen them follow their men to war, seen them seeking over battlefields to find their lonely dead, or the wounded who would die but for them. I have seen a woman pick up a man and carry him off the field to a place where he might have care (p. 129).
Where go the years? Down what tunnel of time are poured the precious days? (p. 248)
If This was a Movie, I Would Rate It: PG for lots of violent fights, deaths, captures, escapes... but all told in non-gruesome or terrifying ways. It does have a handful of old-fashioned cuss words.
This is my 11th book read from my TBR shelves for #TheUnreadShelfProject2023.
I've never read anything by L'amour, but my Dad has read them all -- a passion inspired in him by a much-loved uncle, so I can only think of L'amour books with fondness. :)
ReplyDeleteGypsi, that's cool that your dad has read all of L'Amour's books! I have read maybe 8 or 10? So far! I really enjoy his writing style :-)
DeleteTotally off topic -- oh my goodness! I just discovered that you are the bokstagrammer that I have followed for some time. I love to participate in your booskstagram prompts! You've even been kind enough to comment some times! I am:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.instagram.com/Mountain_Medb_reads/
Gypsi (again), lol! That's so funny that you just discovered that connection between my Bookstagram account and my blog! I totally know who you are over there -- I even follow you! I didn't realize YOU also blog, so I will have to go check out your blogs :-)
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