One dress with a story spanning a century. Four brides with
four unique lives in four different generations.
Those two lines probably have you thinking you know exactly
what this book is about. Aw, it’s been
done before, you say. Maybe so, but never like this.
Charlotte is a modern woman running a successful wedding
dress boutique in the American south and suffering from twinges of panic without
understanding why at the thought of marrying her wonderful, family-man, architect, studmuffin of a fiancé.
Orphaned as a young child, she can hardly remember a time she wasn’t lonely,
until Tim showed up and won her heart in a whirlwind romance. They were each
everything the other had always wanted. So why, then, the feeling that it was
all just going too fast?
Mary
Grace fell in love with her childhood chum and in the midst of the Great
Depression, he asked her to be his wife and to go away with him to serve the
Lord by hosting tent meetings all across the country...
Hillary
married her Marine fiancé on a whim just before he shipped out to Vietnam, and
only a few months later she received back his dog tags, threw them in a trunk with the dress she wore the day she married him, and welded the trunk shut...
One day Charlotte found herself wandering through a random
auction when something made her bid on a worn out old trunk, welded shut. The
auctioneer wore vibrant purple and when he looked at her, it felt as if his
eyes bore into her soul.
Little did she know that the contents of that trunk would
connect her life forever to these other three women, and to one of them in ways
she could never have imagined…
My cousin calls me a book snob. I don’t read many novels
these days unless they are old enough to be considered “classic.” But if I do,
they generally have to be Christian ones, because I often find contemporary secular
novels a bit too graphic and crude (There are always exceptions, though :)).
But, being a supposed “book snob”, I am very sensitive to contrived
spirituality or overly-done religiosity in these books, leaving a story flat or
shallow (Walking with Christ is REAL LIFE, people, and Christians are human
too). Thus, I generally reach for my classics when needing a novel break. That
said, it’ll mean something when I tell you that I have literally been purposely
dragging out my reading of Rachel Hauck’s The Wedding Dress, luxuriating
in its lines, in its love stories, in its twists and turns; savouring the
feeling of being lost in the plot of a contemporary Christian novel without a
hint of that tell-tale cringe.
I
still wish I hadn’t quite reached the end…
*I received this book free from Thomas
Nelson Publishers as part of their BookSneeze.com book review bloggers
program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I
have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with
the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255
2 comments:
You should bring this home next time you come so I can read it! :-)
The Bull sale was fun. Joel wants to get more involved now. Hope you are having a good day. I'm praying for you.
Such a well written review! Now I really do want to read this!
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