The Beloved Land

by Janette Oke & T. Davis Bunn

Hardcover, 2002

Status

Available

Call number

FIC Oke

Collection

Publication

Doubleday (2002), Edition: LARGE PRINT, 467 pages

Description

The tragic Acadian saga recounted in The Meeting Place, when the British drove the French from Nova Scotia, has followed two families over a score of years to the birth pangs of a new nation. The Song of Acadia has been one full of pathos but also of hope. Faith in God and family eventually have brought the Henri Robichauds to Louisiana, and finally, to a life of tranquility among the bayous. Back in Nova Scotia, the Andrew Harrows have been beacons of light among the British and the French communities. But the American Revolution has created turmoil on two continents, dividing nations, people, and, sometimes, even families. Anne in England and Nicole in the New World have little hope of seeing one another again in the foreseeable future. Then a letter finds its way to both sisters with news that send them on a frantic and harrowing journey to...The Beloved Land.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Lynngood
Against the backdrop of the American Revolution, two daughters make dangerous journeys in an effort to see their ailing father.
LibraryThing member SherylHendrix
The many threads of this series begin to pull together as the French and English families move toward reconciliation and peace while the Revolutionary War plods on; the promise of a "surprise" is unleashed as Catherine's father searches for his long-lost sister's family. I enjoyed this book as much
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if not more than all four that preceded it because it brought hope and restoration after many disappointments and conflicts that arose through the earlier books.
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