About the Book
Book: A Christmas Tale for Little Women
Author: Linda Brooks Davis
Genre: Christian Historical Fiction
Release Date: September 15, 2020
Broadview is attired for Christmas. Oklahoma heiress, Adelaide Fitzgerald, is hosting two young girls who have chosen to celebrate Christmas with Auntie Addie rather than their family in Colorado.
Adelaide must give these girls a Christmas like no other. Has she thought of everything? What would top off this holiday in an extraordinary way?
The answer lies just the other side of Rock Creek. But what will it take for her to realize it is the Christmas topper she’s been seeking?
It’s 1912, and Adelaide Fitzgerald’s view of Christmas is about to emerge as a tale for a lifetime.
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My Review:
Sometimes you pick up a book and you get so much more than you expected. This book did that. I read Little Women when I was young, so the title made me curious. This book is "rich" in the telling of its story, the depth of the characters, and the writing style transports you to where the story is told. It's set in 1912, but don't let that intimidate you if you're not used to more historical settings. I think it only made this story stand out even more.
Kindness, sharing, supporting others, Christ, so much is in these pages that just flew past as I was reading. It's full of emotions with an ending that left me satisfied but wanting to read more of this author's books.
5 Stars
About the Author
Linda Brooks Davis is a lifelong Texan who devoted 40 years to special education as a therapist, teacher, and administrator. She retired in 2008 and now writes full time.
Linda’s debut novel, Amazon best-selling The Calling of Ella McFarland, Book One in the Women of Rock Creek series, is set in 1905 Indian Territory prior to Oklahoma statehood. It won Jerry Jenkins Operation First Novel in 2014 and subsequently, ACFW’s Carol
Linda and her beloved husband Al worship and minister at Oak Hills Church in San Antonio and dote on six grandchildren. Readers may contact Linda through her website, www.lindabrooksdavis.com.
More from Linda
Everyone worked at my home on a South Texas farm near the U.S. border with Mexico.
My playmates were children of Hispanic laborers. Language never hindered playing la casa, making mud pies, or rocking
Daddy paid workers on Saturdays, some by the hour, others by production. Lining up, they extended their hands, and he laid cash across their open palms. They checked the figures they had scribbled on paper scraps, trusting el patrón to correct discrepancies. Humble, grateful people, they showed respect
My father verified immigration paperwork for those whom he housed. Others lived in the shadows, arriving around sunup and disappearing before sundown. Each evening a car or truck would rattle alongside the field, and the shadow worker would slip inside. Then the vehicle would clatter toward the horizon. And returned another day.
Occasionally, however, an alarm shouted in Spanish would sound across the field. Dropping his cotton sack, a worker would dash toward the cotton trailer in the turn row. Like hounds burrowing under a house, he and a compadre would leap over the trailer’s sides and dig a hole in the freshly picked cotton. The first crawled in, and the other covered him.
The immigration officer making his rounds would walk into the field and occasionally stomp around inside the trailer, searching for man-sized lumps. I never witnessed the discovery of a shadow worker, but I heard about them on other farms. Worst of all, I heard about tragedies. With very little oxygen between tightly packed fluffs of cotton, a man could suffocate and occasionally would. I wondered what would lead a man to take such chances and how my law-abiding, God-loving father justified his complicity. So, I asked, and he answered, “Desperation, sugar. All they want is work. A man wants to provide for his family wherever or however he can. I can’t turn them away.”
Sounded like work was a gift. Huh? my ten-year-old brain asked itself.
Years later, I understood this principle. The second chapter of Genesis shows us that God created man not to laze around all day, but to work.
The Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it. Genesis 2:15
Therefore, not only in “the beginning,” but on our farm in 1956, a man’s strength to work was God’s gift. The opportunity to work was Daddy’s gift to the men. The fruit of each man’s labor was the gift he sent home each week and the fulfillment of his need to provide for his family.
At
Answers evaded me then—-as they do now—-but as a writer in my eighth decade of life, one truth I hold onto is that the strength for each day of writing and less pain in my arthritic hands and back are gifts from God. Each opportunity to write is an opportunity not only to entertain but to inspire readers to seek God in their everyday lives. Each word, unique turn of a phrase, or plot idea . . . is my gift to Him.
Protecting our safety is a far more complicated endeavor in 2020 than it was in 1956. Threats arise like none presented five decades ago, but work is still a gift. God wired it into our DNA. Come to think of it, the ideas for A Christmas Tale for Little Women and the subsequent novel—one set in the southern tip of Texas, a story about a loving, destitute man who wants only to provide for his family—are gifts.
Those diligent workers of 1956 and other years deserve a story that honors them. My gift to them and to Him is A Christmas Tale for Little Women.
Thank you, Lord.
Note: Photos from Pixabay
Blog Stops
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, October 20
Blogging With Carol, October 20
Through the Lens of Scripture, October 21
Connect in Fiction, October 21
Get Cozy Book Nook, October 21
She Lives To Read, October 22
Artistic Nobody, October 22 (Guest Review from Joni Truex)
For Him and My Family, October 23
deb’s Book Review, October 23
Splashes of Joy, October 23
Connie’s History Classroom, October 24
Jeanette’s Thoughts, October 24
Locks, Hooks and Books, October 25
Book Bites, Bee Stings, & Butterfly Kisses, October 25
Mary Hake, October 25
Abba’s Prayer Warrior Princess, October 26
Ashley’s Bookshelf, October 26
KarenSueHadley, October 27
Pause for Tales, October 27
Older & Smarter?, October 28
Inklings and notions, October 28
Betti Mace, October 29
Captive Dreams Window, October 29
Library Lady’s Kid Lit, October 29
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, October 30
CarpeDiem, October 30
Texas Book-aholic, October 31
Batya’s Bits, October 31
Happily Managing a Household of Boys, November 1
Moments, November 1
Lighthouse Academy Blog, November 1 (Guest Review from Marilyn Ridgway)
Sara Jane Jacobs, November 2
Musings of a Sassy Bookish Mama, November 2
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Linda is giving away the grand prize package of all 6 eBooks in
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/10264/a-christmas-tale-for-little-women-celebration-tour-giveaway
Sounds like a great book.
ReplyDeleteI've never heard of the genre called Christian Historical Fiction. It sounds great. Thanks for the giveaway!
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds good and your review really has me wanting to read this.
ReplyDeleteI, too, love Little Women by Louisa May Alcott. I am sure I will enjoy Linda's book just as much.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a good one!
ReplyDeleteChristmas stories are so much fun.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the review.
Wonderful review, Carol! Sounds like the perfect holiday read.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate hearing about your book, thanks and for the giveaway also. Thanks so much!
ReplyDelete