A Mending at the Edge is the third and final novel in Jane Kirkpatrick’s Change and Cherish series of historical novels. The books are based on the life of Emma Wagner Giesy, a German-American woman raised in a religious communal society. The author weaves the myriad details gleaned from extensive research with a fruitful imagination and presents the readers with a captivating tale of life in the 1850’s.
For background: as a young woman Emma questions, rather than accepts, the
When her husband becomes the trusted leader of a scouting party to begin a new settlement in the western territories that will become Oregon and Washington, Emma convinces the community leader to let her go too. Wilhelm is hesitant yet determines it might be a chance for her to know “all that a woman’s lot entails,” perhaps settling for once and for all her issue with conformity.
Throughout the series, we feel Emma’s struggles as she wrestles with the yearning for independence and recognition. The pinnacle of this wrestling comes to a head in A Mending at the Edge when tragedy strikes. Emma is devastated and angry with God. Even more reluctant to yield to any community help, she makes poor decisions. As a last resort, she finds herself fleeing to the new western settlement and becoming once again a part of the communal society she tried so hard to flee.
Emma’s husband and other community members always attributed circumstances to God’s goodness and direction, whereas Emma was so blinded by an independent spirit and pride she could not or was not willing to do the same. She wanted purpose, but did not seek God’s direction. She exemplified Phil
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