Reading
a Lynn Austin book is always a treat. In Legacy of Mercy
Austin seamlessly stitches together two strong story lines, honoring
each without detracting from the other. In the late 1800s women of
society were not expected to marry for love, but for joining families
to the mutual benefit of both. So, Anneke (Anna) Nicholson had
resigned herself to the necessity of her marriage to William
Wilkinson. The marriage would help her adopted parents both
financially and socially. Still her mind, and her heart, could not
help but wonder what life as a minster's wife would be like if her
and Derk Vander Veen's circumstances were different. While Anna loved
her parents and appreciated all that they had provided for her, the
simpler, God-focused life of her recently discovered grandmother,
Geesje de Jonge, spoke to her.
Cornelia
Den Herder had known great loss in her seventeen years. She had lost
her immediate family to a fire, everyone who loved her. Forced to
live with a cold and distant grandfather and his extensive list of
rules,Cornelia was bereft. Now she and her grandfather had fled their
native Netherlands for an uncertain future in America. While
searching for jobs and a place to settle, Cornelia had come to live
with Anneke's grandmother, while her grandfather resided next door
with Derk Vander Veen and his father. Geesje longed to help the
deeply saddened young woman to repair her relationship with her
grandfather, but Cornelia held deep secrets and her grandfather
resented Geesje's meddling.
The
need to accept and extend forgiveness and mercy is the theme that
runs throughout this story. As always Austin has developed characters
whose lives will matter to her readers as they, while set in another
time and place, reflect elements of the readers own needs and
desires. The need to be truly accepted for oneself is another strong
theme in this story, one that resonates in today's society. I thank
NetGalley and Bethany House Publishers for providing me with a copy
of Legacy of Mercy in
exchange for my honest opinion. I was under no obligation to provide
a positive review and received no monetary compensation.
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