When Comes the Spring (Canadian West)

by Janette Oke

Paperback, 1985

Status

Available

Call number

Rom Oke

Publication

Bethany House Pub (1985), 256 pages

Description

Fiction. Christian Fiction. Historical Fiction. Janette Oke's beloved story of a young teacher moving west continues as she searches for love. Canadian West book 2.

User reviews

LibraryThing member cherryblossommj
This one I'm having to take a break from, it's just not exciting me...
LibraryThing member judyg54
This was book 2 in the series and you really need to read book one first, because book 2 starts right up where the first book leaves off. This story finds Elizabeth beginning her life with Wynn, but where they are sent by the North West Mounted Police leaves alot to be desired. Elizabeth must learn
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how to live simply where no other white women live and to learn to handle the long and cruel winters. Can their love for each other endure through the harsh conditions, the loneliness and the daily hardships of life?
I enjoyed reading of Elizabeth's life, and really came to appreciate her new friend Mrs. McLain. When she comes to understand how all the Bible stories she has been reading are true, it was just a precious and well written moment. I always appreciate it when the author explains the gospel plan in her books. Looking forward to book 3.
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LibraryThing member Carole8
The second book in the Canadian West series. The characters are further developed. Worth a read.
LibraryThing member NadineC.Keels
Elizabeth once braved the frontier to fill a teaching position, but now she'll find out if she has what it takes to make it in the North as the new wife of a Mountie in When Comes the Spring by author Janette Oke.

It took some time for me to really get into this second novel in the Canadian West
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series. While the events of the book's first half didn't exactly seem to drag, they still felt stretched out to the point of being stretched thin. The sweetness around Elizabeth and Wynn's wedding was spread on rather thickly (too thickly), and because Elizabeth had already learned a pretty tough way of life in the West, it seemed strange that she'd now get huffy and/or weepy with Wynn on account of conveniences he can't offer as they start out in the North.

But, maybe it's just all the prairie and frontier novels I've read that gave me a low expectation of conveniences--novels that Elizabeth doesn't know about. Besides, though she gets snively sometimes, she recognizes it and does something productive about it every time. And then the story picks up about halfway through, when she and Wynn reach their new home and the challenges awaiting them there. I especially appreciate what Elizabeth learns about herself in regards to her native neighbors, particularly the women she meets.

I'm on a mission to finally get this entire series read, and I'm enjoying the mission. On to Book Three.
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LibraryThing member KeriLynneD
I didn't enjoy this book as much as the first in the series. It has a lot more religion and God talk than the first, which is fine, it's just not what I usually read and doesn't keep me interested. I'll still try the next book in the series just not right away. I missed Elizabeth's interaction with
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children being a teacher but it was interesting to see her in the new wild setting of the north with Wynn.
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Language

ISBN

9780871237958
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