Reviewed by readingwithwrin on
After exhausting all of their options in the city, Elise decides she has to go west on the orphan train to a small railroad town, and to send money back to her young siblings until she can afford for them to come and be with her.
This is when the story really started to get interesting to me. Not only do we get to see how these small railroad towns started, but also how little the real owners of the railroad companies understood what their employees were having to deal with for such little pay. We see the struggles and compassions that these women went through and how over time they all started protecting one another. They knew nobody else was going to stop certain things from happening so they had to do it themselves.
Overall I really loved this story. Learning about a different part of the orphan train and some of the societies that helped bring people west was fascinating. It's something that I haven't really read much about before, despite being absolutely fascinated by it. That is fully my fault because after reading several stories about how awful the children were treated by their adoptive parents, I just could keep reading them. It's nice now to have a different side of the orphan train stories and to really see what might have happened with women wanting to go west as well. I've always wondered how women were able to go west that didn't already have family or friends out there and this really showed how, and why they were sent or allowed to go 'alone'.
As for the romance, it was extremely cliche and honestly was so easy to tell what was going to happen from the first time the two characters met.
I can't wait to read the next book in this series and see if we continue on with this character, or get a companion novel?
Thank you to NetGalley and Bethany House for giving me an e-arc of this book in exchange for my honest review.
Blog Twitter Instagram Facebook
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 13 June, 2017: Finished reading
- 13 June, 2017: Reviewed