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Description
Informations
Publié par | Baker Publishing Group |
Date de parution | 01 juillet 2013 |
Nombre de lectures | 1 |
EAN13 | 9781441242280 |
Langue | English |
Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0432€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.
Extrait
© 2013 by Ann H. Gabhart
Published by Revell
a division of Baker Publishing Group
P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287
www.revellbooks.com
Ebook edition created 2013
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means for example, electronic, photocopy, recording without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4412-4228-0
Scripture used in this book, whether quoted or paraphrased by the characters, is taken from the King James Version of the Bible.
This is a work of historical reconstruction; the appearances of certain historical figures is therefore inevitable. All other characters, however, are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
“A classic. Ann Gabhart pens an enduring tale from the very first line of Small Town Girl . Rosey Corner is a world you won’t want to leave, rife with spiritual truths, rich romance, and memorable characters that linger long after!”
Laura Frantz , author of The Colonel’s Lady and Love’s Reckoning
“The characters of Ann Gabhart’s Small Town Girl pulled me into their lives and did not let me go. This love story, painted upon the canvas of a small Kentucky town struggling with WWII, is one of the most riveting historical romances I’ve ever read.”
Serena B. Miller , winner of the 2012 RITA award for Inspirational Romance
Praise for Angel Sister
“What a jewel of a story. Reminded me of To Kill a Mockingbird . Like a Kentucky summer, Angel Sister starts slow and easy but by the end, roars along, leaving the reader breathless and wanting more. ”
Lauraine Snelling , author of the Red River series, Daughters of Blessing , and One Perfect Day
“This book will leave you changed as it uncovers family secrets and draws you into the days following the First World War and the Great Depression. It will astound you how the characters persevere while making difficult decisions amidst heartache and their determination to make it through the toughest of hard times.”
RT Book Reviews
“ Angel Sister paints an inspirational portrait of forgiveness and grace in the midst of trial and hardship. . . . It reveals how forgiveness brings freedom, not so much for the one forgiven as for the one doing the forgiving. Two major strengths to Ann Gabhart’s writing include her deeply textured characters and rich atmosphere. She moves the plot forward by weaving the past with the present. . . . There are many levels to this deftly written novel.”
Crosswalk.com
“Gabhart is one of the best Christian-oriented historical fiction authors writing today. Her characters have depth, her plots are complex, and there are no easy answers. Praying does not always work, at least not in obvious ways, and her characters struggle with their faith the way any sane person would when confronted with war, alcoholism, abuse, and abandonment. Angel Sister is the beautiful, sometimes difficult, story of a family using love, faith, and forgiveness to hold itself together.”
Historical Novel Review
To my mother, Olga, and her sisters, Evelyn, Margaret, and Bill
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Endorsements
Dedication
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Books by Ann H. Gabhart
Back Ads
Back Cover
1
I t wasn’t a good thing to be in love with the man your sister was going to marry. Kate Merritt had no doubts about that. Especially when you were helping that sister button up her wedding dress and adjust her veil. Still the truth was what it was. The trick was making sure nobody ever guessed it.
“Wow!” Kate stood back and gave Evie a big smile. “You look like you just stepped off a magazine cover.”
Evie made a face as if she didn’t believe Kate and turned back to peer into the oval mirror attached to their mother’s old dresser. A wavy spot in the old mirror bent her reflection out of shape.
Evie stuck out her lower lip and blew air up to lift her red curls off her forehead. Leaning closer to the mirror, she carefully patted them back into place. “The first thing I’m going to buy for our apartment is a new mirror. Not something passed down, but a new one right out of the store.”
“Wouldn’t you rather have a radio? Something both you and Mike could enjoy.” Kate grabbed a folded newspaper off the dresser to fan Evie.
It was extra hot for September. Another reason Evie was cross. Evie had planned everything out to the last detail for a perfect wedding day. She’d picked the last Sunday in September, because it never rained much in September and it wouldn’t be too hot inside the Rosey Corner Baptist Church no matter how many people packed the pews to see their young preacher get married. And now the weather on September 28, 1941, the day she’d picked to be perfect, had betrayed her. That morning she’d sat in the middle of the bed and cried for a half hour while thunder rumbled in the sky outside. Finally Kate warned her how people might talk if she showed up at the altar with bloodshot eyes.
Evie leaned closer to the mirror and rubbed her finger across her nose, then touched a flecked spot on the mirror. “Mike has to look in a mirror to comb his hair, doesn’t he? And if we had a radio, he’d be listening to war news all the time. President Roosevelt telling us how bad things are. One minute the president is promising to keep us out of the war and the next he’s talking about drafting more boys. That’s just too depressing.”
“But true. You know the Germans have surrounded Leningrad now. They’re cutting off the supply lines to starve the Russians out.”
Kate didn’t like thinking about the war either, but that was all the talk at Merritt’s Dry Goods Store these days. Hitler’s blitzkrieg. The Nazis occupying France and Poland. The Red Army holding against Hitler’s forces. Ships going down. It was always a relief when Graham Lindell came in the store talking about how many hits Joe DiMaggio was up to now, just so they could think about something besides the war news.
Evie didn’t care about baseball either. For weeks, she hadn’t thought about anything except having a perfect wedding day and being a perfect bride.
“For heaven’s sake, Kate, don’t ruin my day with war talk. We can’t do a thing about what’s going on in Russia. And don’t they have millions of soldiers in that Red Army they’re always talking about? All I’m asking for is a nice little wedding.” She raised her arms and lifted her veil to cool her neck. “How can a piece of material with a thousand holes in it be so hot?”
“You don’t have to wear the veil. Your hair looks great. As always.” Kate pulled the veil out away from Evie to fan her neck.
She really was beautiful. She’d always been the pretty sister with her wavy red hair and clear blue eyes. Kate had plain brown hair that didn’t curl unless she pin curled it, and her eyes jumped from green to blue to gray according to what color she was wearing.
And according to her mood, or so Carl Noland was always telling her. Everybody, including Carl, thought they were a couple. Everybody except Kate, that is. She should have told him months ago there was no chance of that ever being true, but it was easier to let him hang around and hope he’d lose interest. He was a nice enough guy, and she’d known him forever. Some of her friends thought she and Evie should have had a double wedding. Carl had a good job with the post office. Kate was already nineteen. So why wait? Except Kate was never going to say yes to Carl Noland. Never.
The only man she’d ever wanted to say yes to was less than an hour away from marrying her sister, just as soon as Evie quit finding things to complain about and headed for the church. Kate had been in love with Mike Champion since the first Sunday he’d come to fill in at the church after Grandfather Reece had a stroke. That was five years ago now.
Way long enough to know the whole idea was hopeless. And she did know it. Had known it since she was sixteen. By then, Mike and Evie had been dating for a year. By then, she’d cornered Mike leaving the church on a Sunday night before he drove back to Louisville and told him straight out that she loved him. He hadn’t exactly laughed, but she had the feeling he wanted to.
“Ah, Kate. How sweet.” He put his arm around her shoulders. “But trust me, it’s just a crush. Nothing serious. You’ll forget all about me when you get a little older and meet the man the Lord has in mind for you.”
Kate had been glad it was past twilight so Mike couldn’t see how her face was flaming. Or how her heart was breaking. “You won’t tell Evie, will you?” she managed to whisper.
“Tell her what?” He had tightened his arm around her shoulders for a few seconds. “You’re my sister in Christ, Kate. The Bible says it’s good to have brotherly love in your heart.”
Even now after so many years, Kate flushed when she thought about that conversation. She flapped the paper at herself to cool her face. At least the heat trapped in the house from all the baking for the wedding reception would keep Evie from guessing the real reason for Kate’s red cheeks. Evie stepped away from Kate so that the veil settled back in a soft cloud over her hair and neck. “No, no. A girl has to have a veil to be a real bride.” She swished her skirt back and forth. The whispery sound of silk on silk didn’t bring the smile it usually brought to her face. Instead she looked near tears again as she appealed to Kate. “Do I really look pretty?”
“No, Evie, you don’t look pretty.” Kate threw her hands out wide. “You look gorgeous. Absolutely, completely gorgeous. Mike is