Synopsis
Beloved bestselling author Dorothy Garlock has a way of writing that is both old-fashioned and extremely modern, recalling a long-lost time of grandmothers and great-grandmothers in the heartland of America. Her writing is spare and simple yet evocative, and her greatest strength lies in her abilities as a storyteller. With Hope, her sepia-tinted portrait of life and love in Oklahoma in the early years of the Great Depression, is like brilliant light across a dimly lit farmland. Part "The Waltons" and part The Bridges of Madison County, With Hope is a wonderful, heartwarming tale, sure to delight Garlock fans as well as fans of homespun romance.
Publishers Weekly
The bestselling author of Sweetwater and more than 20 other novels tackles Depression-era Oklahoma with wit, freshness and memorable characterization. In 1932, after Henry Ann Henry's father dies, she's left with a farm to run and two disreputable half-siblings to civilize. Soon the young woman's brood grows to include her African American foster mother, a vagrant with a secret past, and the young son of a handsome neighbor whose wife is going mad. There are plenty of troubles to contend with, not the least of which are the wagging tongues of the town gossips. An old-fashioned storyteller, Garlock creates people and places with a tart honesty reminiscent of a more adult version of the "Anne of Green Gables" series. Although the black dialect may grate on modern ears, it still has the ring of authenticity. The book is billed as a historical romance but should have wider appeal. FYI: This is the first of three books by Garlock set in the 1930s; the next, With Song, will be published in spring 1999.