- Proclaimed by critics as a classic and "the best novel about the Mountain Meadows Massacre."
- Gives the perspective and feelings of men and women who took part in the Mountain Meadows Massacre.
- Handles a sensitive subject in a way that allows readers to feel as if they were actually there.
They believed they had left their fears behind. They traveled over fifteen hundred miles to escape persecution, only to find their hard-won peace threatened by the U.S. Army, as well as their old enemies from Missouri.
What happened in the Mountain Meadows on that day in September of 1857 may never be fully understood, but author Marilyn Brown skillfully and sensitively evokes the layers of tragedy surrounding a people and place forever scarred by a brief moment in history.
After the horror of Haun's Mill and Carthage, they thought they had found peace in their small community in southern Utah. But the nightmare of the Mountain Meadows Massacre still lay ahead. And its shadow would haunt them for the rest of their lives.
-For Elizabeth, who lost her family during the westward trek and loved a man beyond her reach- and perhaps beyond heaven's as well.
-For Jacob, who knew he would love one particular woman forever.
-For John Lee, whose reluctant obedience would shadow his name, his life, and the lives of his descendants for generations to come.
Reviews-
Well-crafted novel ... may be among those few works of Mormon fiction we call "classic."
-Richard Cracroft,
Brigham Young Magazine
A very sensitive subject handled well. I'm impressed.
-Douglas Thayer, Author,
Summerfire
Best novel about the Mountain Meadows Massacre.
-Lavina Fielding Anderson,
Editor
Disturbing and profound.
-Tory Anderson,
Voice of the Association
for Mormon Letters
I felt I was at the Mountain Meadows Massacre in 1857... Marilyn Brown makes history real and relevant one hundred fifty years after the fact.
-Lee Nelson, Author,
Storm Testament
Powerful! I saw how it could really have happened.
-Veda Tebbs Hale, Biographer of
Maurine Whipple
It is not facts that teach us of others, it is living their lives and our hearts breakingwith theirs.
-Mari Franc, Author,
The End of Silence