45. The Pursuit of Elena Bradford. Ann H. Gabhart. 2025. 352 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, Christian fiction, historical romance, 1840s]
First sentence: Elena Bradford had yet to meet the man to make her consider marriage. She would, her mother assured her when Elena was younger. She should, her mother insisted when Elena turned twenty. She must, her mother demanded when Elena's father died. By then Elena was twenty-two.
Premise/plot: After the death of her father, Elena and her sister--along with their mother--go to Graham Springs, Kentucky, to a health resort to 'catch' husbands. The goal: marry Elena off to a rich man and allow Ivy to marry for love. Elena as a 'spinster' is unsure she'll be able to catch a man--wealthy or not. And she despises her mother's intentions though she can't really stop her mother from scheming. There are several men who could prove potential love interests. Elena finds herself attracted to two: an artist with dreams of going West to paint landscapes and a recently jilted man (I believe his family's business is raising horses???). Kirby and Andrew are night and day different. Kirby is EAGER to marry anyone who can give him enough money for a ticket west. If she's pleasant, charming, a fellow artist that would be a bonus. But he can tolerate anyone--or thinks he can. Andrew is more reserved and is unsure if he'll ever marry. However he finds himself falling for Elena. Meanwhile, we have a scheming mother, a determined sister (she is in love with a man back home), and a MYSTERY GUEST that dies on the same day she arrives after making quite an entrance. Ivy (the sister) may just have witnessed something she shouldn't....
My thoughts: I LOVED, LOVED, LOVED this one. Granted, I could have done without the twenty-two equals spinster, old maid trope. But I loved the story and the characters. I found myself underlining so many sentences! Which is something I usually don't do with Christian fiction!
Quotes:
- No boy when she was younger, no man now, had ever truly pursued her. Or was it that she had never given love a chance?
- She couldn't solve her problems tonight. Tomorrow would bring whatever it brought, and she would face it with the Lord's help. With his love. She pulled the thought of that love up over her like a blanket and slept.
- A woman willing to marry for money rather than love is hardly a lady.
- "Dear Father in heaven," she whispered after Ivy and her mother left to take the waters. "If there is a man like that here, please let me meet him. One I can love as a wife should love her husband. I realize I've done nothing to deserve love, but love isn't something to earn. It just is."
- Sometimes we need to do more than hope. We need to add actions to that hope of friendship.