Loving Liza Jane, by Sharlene MacLaren
Historical Romance in the Tradition of Anne of Green Gables and Laura Ingalls Wilder
By Kevin Lucia, published Jan 25, 2007
Published Content: 126 Total Views: 28,803 Favorited By: 4 CPs
When newly licensed teacher Liza Jane Merriwether arrives in the small, Kentuckian town of Little Hickman Creek, she finds the town much smaller than imagined, its folk more "rough and tumble" than she'd bargained for, and a student population posing far more trouble than she'd like. Suffering the long, bumpy cart ride into town with the ornery Mr. Brackett was bad enough, but when Liza discovers that the private lodging she'd requested isn't even ready yet, it's enough to make a girl want to run home, as she thinks to herself, Oh Lord, what have I done?
Undaunted, Liza Jane is determined that God has brought her to Little Hickman Creek for a reason. She's been hired to teach for one year, and in spite of a town more concerned with its crops than education, a pack of hooligans that's run off three teachers in exactly three years, and her own doubts about her ability, she's determined to make the best of the situation. In fact, the one thing she can do - get a handle on her housing, and discover why her personal cabin isn't ready yet - she does, marching out the Broughton farmstead, bristling with questions.
However, Ben Broughton is the last thing she expected to find in Little Hickman Creek - a charming, handsome widower struggling to run his farm and raise his two daughters, seven year old Lili and fifteen month-old Maggie. He's rugged, contrary, and protective in an old-fashioned way that aggravates and charms Liza to no end. He's also a spiritual man, too - a true man of God who's accepted the death of his wife as a burden of faith, not allowing his losses to make him a bitter man.
Loving Liza Jane, by Sharlene MacLaren
Takeaways
- witty fun
- romantic
- enjoyable period piece
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