Book Review: A Land To Call Home

A Land to Call Home, the third novel in “The Red River of the North Series” is another exceptional Historical Fiction by Lauraine Snelling. The story takes place in 1884-85 in Dakota Territory, in what would become North Dakota.

The story centers around the families of two sisters-in-law, both widowed and remarried, but includes other neighbors and relatives who fight to survive the struggle of taming the virgin prairie. The adults are originally from Norway and they speak Norwegian, though struggle to learn English. As the pioneers face almost insurmountable challenges to “prove up” their individual homesteads, they also work toward their dream of building a real town.

The immigrants’ homes are made of sod, dwellings that are dark and damp. But the women make colorful quilts to liven their environment. Even the combination church/school building is a sod structure. Helping one another, sharing their meager supplies, and living their strong Christian faith carry them through the hard times.

Reading this series has made me appreciate even more the hardships of our early pioneers. I love reading about how those brave people managed, what they ate and how they spent their time. Their lives were centered around their deeply rooted religion. When their faith was tested, they helped one another through it. I particularly enjoyed the first Christmas program in the new soddy school house. In those days there were no problems celebrating a traditional Christmas pageant with a live baby, donkey, even sheep. The community pitched in with materials to make the program a success.

Lauraine Snelling captures the spirit of our hard-working early settlers. As I’ve followed along with many of the same characters in previous books in the series, I applaud their triumphs and despair their hardships. I admire their deep faith and their ingenuity in finding ways to strive. I love the “Red River of the North” series and look forward to book four.

Book Review: A New Day Rising

A New Day Rising by Lauraine Snelling is the second of the Red River of the North Series. I loved this book as much as I did the first. This book continues with the Bjorklund family.

In this novel, Ingeborg Bjorklund, a widow and mother of two young boys, struggles to keep her farm and family together. Living in a soddy on the Dakota Territory prairie in the 1880’s is tough for anyone, but for a woman without a husband, mere existence can be overwhelming.

Family in Norway has written to their timber man son, Haakan, a distant cousin of Ingeborg’s late husband, that Ingeborg desperately needs help. Haakan’s job in the Dakota north woods is a winter occupation, so he sets out to give Ingeborg help with the heavy field work for the planting and harvest seasons, but plans to return to the work he loves in time for winter logging.

Haakan finally arrives, a godsend to Ingeborg. Although she is relieved to have the help, Ingeborg resents having her independence threatened. On the other hand, there is no denying the attraction she begins to feel for him.

In the meantime, another relative, Ingeborg’s late husband’s younger brother, is also encouraged to go to Ingeborg’s aid, and he sets out from Norway. His trip is delayed with one mishap after another, but his expectations never waver, thinking that once he arrives, he will take over his brother’s farm. Who knows, he might acquire his brother’s widow, too.

Misunderstandings, accidents and complications arise, making A New Day Rising a powerful read. Lauraine Snelling does a remarkable job of describing the flat, fertile farmland of the Red River Valley, and its first Norwegian settlers. The Red River of the North is an amazing series. I can hardly wait to read the third novel.

Book Review: An Untamed Land

An Untamed Land, the first of a series of six historical novels by Lauraine Snelling, describes the sacrifices, courage and dedication of America’s early settlers.

In 1880, Roald and Ingeborg Bjorklund and their little son leave their home and loved ones in Norway to seek free land in America. With them are Roald’s brother and pregnant wife.

The ocean passage is difficult, made even more so by the early birth of the baby. They finally arrive on the docks of New York city. The brothers work to earn money for the next phase of their journey. They save enough to purchase tickets on a series of trains that get them closer to their destination. Finally, they take a covered wagon for a rough overland journey to Dakota Territory. They settle on acreage along the banks of the Red River of the North.

The families find the Dakota Territory land harsh and difficult to plow, especially without the conveniences of more modern equipment, that though available is unaffordable for them. They live in the wagon, cooking on an open fire until they can build a soddy—a house made of sod bricks consisting of grass and densely packed roots that hold the soil together. By the time winter arrives, the six of them live in the cramped structure, thankful to be out of the bitter cold weather.

With grinding hard work the two families begin to build their adjacent farms, always working toward “proving up the land” accomplished by building a home and cultivating the land.

Our American pioneers are a constant inspiration to me: their hardships, their strong religious faith even in the face of tragedy, their struggle to bring civilization into their lives with schools and churches, and their never-ending toil with crops, livestock and weather. The Bjorklund families experienced sickness and death, but still they endured.

Lauraine Snelling, the prolific multi-award winning author of An Untamed Land (Red River North #1) has had more than 80 books published and her books are available in several languages. To learn more about this author, visit http://www.laurainesnelling.com/