"A plate of apples, an open fire, and a 'jolly goode booke' are a fair substitute for heaven", vowed Barney. -L.M. Montgomery, 'The Blue Castle'
Thursday, May 29, 2014
How to Tell if You're in a Christian Historical Novel
Inspired by those AWESOME articles in The Toast
someone sets fire to your barn
there's no midwife in town and Eppy’s child is breech.
the mercantile is out of homespun calico
the stove in the schoolhouse sputters and embers catch in your eye just as the dashingly enigmatic new sheriff visits to pay you his compliments as guardian of his orphaned nephew (who is precocious but endearing)
you have a picture of your deceased parents in your reticule but the memory fades in your heart
the civil war embittered the man you hope will court you and he's still in love with his dead wife.
you answered the advertisement for helpmeets and you're on a train, the barren land whizzing past the window and taking your childhood in its stride. Down the track a widower awaits you. You've never kissed a man. You send a million cluttered musings heavenward.
You burned the bumbleberry pie
The cows are diseased
No one has fixed the fence.
There are not enough italics in the world to match the prayers inspired by the new minister’s homily on Ephesians
The oldest Wilcott child has dyslexia but it is not, as of yet, a diagnosable disease.
Will no one teach the gruff –but- gold-hearted blacksmith to read?
Your sewing circle has been stuck in Proverbs 31 for weeks
“With God as the center of your lives, you will build a home with grace as the foundation.”
Your new bustle is torn by your run-in with a stowaway sheep and an un-sturdy carriage wheel.
The banker- philanthropist-mayor-real estate-mining-tycoon is a wolf in sheep's clothing.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
9 comments:
This is awesome.
This. Is AWESOME.
"You send a million cluttered musings heavenward."
The Toast is so jealous of you right now.
INCREDIBLE!!! Loved this!
Love it!
There was a fire, and it flattened not only the landscape but the walls between you and a handsome but distant man.
Your first husband died, but in the end it's okay, because you never loved him like you love Luke.
The orphan train brings a group of darling scamps, and the local spinster will need a husband to turn these misfits into a family.
Unbeknownst to handsome Cord McCord, his cousin ordered him a mail-order bride. When sweet little Millie Prentiss arrives, she's not the matronly cook he was expecting, but a novice little city girl--with a baby.
I laughed so hard. Especially Cheryl's comment about first husbands. She knows of what she speaks.
There must be trains!
Peace, Julie
I'm going to have to write one of these books!
Post a Comment