When Mary Toliver inherits the family cotton plantation from her father as a young girl--an event that costs her dearly in terms of the relatives she has left--she is resolute in devoting herself to the estate, Somerset, despite the whisper of a curse that is said to rest with the land. And when I say resolute I mean absolutely, completely, infuriatingly stubborn when it comes to putting Somerset first above all else, including her own happiness. For Mary is in love with her brother's friend, Percy Warwick, a golden boy heir to a timber fortune who refuses to be second to a plot of soil. I was drawn into the Mary-Percy love story, but their drama and near misses made me want to shake them at certain points. Perhaps it is difficult for a modern woman to understand what it must have been like for a Mary Toliver in those days, running her own business and insisting on independence, but I found it very hard to grasp just how Mary could be so devoted to her land above all else.
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This book is pretty hefty, over 600 pages, but it was an easy read. I found myself wanting to know what happened, hoping against hope that these stubborn and self-sabotaging characters would finally find happiness at last. Overall I thought this was an entertaining story, but there were some parts I had trouble with. Yes, the ending wraps everything up a bit too neatly, but I was okay with it and it wasn't the main stumbling block for me. Instead it was hard for me to put myself in Mary and Rachel's shoes, to try to understand their intense love for their land, a love that would shape their lives, and the lives of the men that love them, for generations.
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