To Whisper Her Name by Tamera Alexander - I wonder why it has taken me so long to read anything by Tamera Alexander. If her other novels are as enjoyable as this one, she will be counted among my favorite Christian authors. This story is set immediately following the Civil War, with young widow Olivia Aberdeen going to live with family friends at Belle Meade Plantation. Olivia's late husband was shot as a traitor to the South, so she is no longer accepted by society. And since her marriage was an unhappy one, she is determined not to be under the thumb of any man again. Olivia expects that she will be head housekeeper at the plantation and famous stud farm, but feels betrayed again when she finds that her host, General Harding, is planning to find her another husband.
Ridley Cooper is from South Carolina, but during the Civil War, he fought for the Union. An encounter during wartime with Belle Meade's head hostler affected him deeply and after the war, he returns to Belle Meade, hoping to learn from this 'horse whisperer'. Of course, in order to get - and keep - a position working in Belle Meade's stables means keeping his Union Army past a secret. Olivia and Ridley are surprised by their growing feelings for each other, and each must deal with their own secrets and find ways to honor their loyalties and deal with the past.
Although the developing love story is what drives the novel, the changing attitudes and tensions following the Civil War are handled well, and I loved that some of the characters were members of the Harding family and plantation. The horse whisperer, Bob Green, was a former slave at Belle Meade, and was largely responsible for the success of the stud farm. In fact, the story told in the Prologue of To Whisper Her Name is based in history.
Ridley Cooper is from South Carolina, but during the Civil War, he fought for the Union. An encounter during wartime with Belle Meade's head hostler affected him deeply and after the war, he returns to Belle Meade, hoping to learn from this 'horse whisperer'. Of course, in order to get - and keep - a position working in Belle Meade's stables means keeping his Union Army past a secret. Olivia and Ridley are surprised by their growing feelings for each other, and each must deal with their own secrets and find ways to honor their loyalties and deal with the past.
Although the developing love story is what drives the novel, the changing attitudes and tensions following the Civil War are handled well, and I loved that some of the characters were members of the Harding family and plantation. The horse whisperer, Bob Green, was a former slave at Belle Meade, and was largely responsible for the success of the stud farm. In fact, the story told in the Prologue of To Whisper Her Name is based in history.