About the Author:
Arliss Ryan, a writer, sailor, pilot, and the great-great-great granddaughter of Nathan Kingsley, lives in Newport, Rhode Island. This is her first novel. The real Kingsley House was taken off its foundations in 1977 and moved to Greenmead, a historic village outside Detroit.
From Kirkus Reviews:
A debut historical, spanning 150 years of small-town Michigan life, that smoothly incorporates the growth of America into the lives of its characters. A descendant of the builders and subsequent inhabitants of the Kingsley House (now a historical museum), Ryan made use of old photographs, documents, and the occasional stroll around the family burial plot in gathering material for this quasi-fiction, amending and vivifying the scattered stories shed heard about her ancestors. Divided into chronological sections, with each branch of the family tree getting no more than a year, her account begins in 1844 as Mary and Nathan Kingsley are settling into married life. Mary is pregnant with her first child, Nathan is working the fields of their farm, and both are enjoying the prim grandeur of the house he built for his new bride. Into the gentle optimism of the couples days comes a runaway seeking shelter. Viewed through Marys eyes, the incident bares the horror of a plantation slaves shackled life. The narrative picks up 19 years later, focusing on the sly exploits of Nathan and Marys son, Horace, as he helps phony spiritualists dupe the residents of Livonia who are grieving the loss of native sons in the Civil War. Horace raises his ugly head throughout the work, cheating neighbors, trying to commit his wife to an asylum, attempting to steal Kingsley House from his sister, outliving many of his own children and other family members while casting an evil shadow over the house he was raised in. A diphtheria epidemic, the sweet union of two teenagers who become lifelong mates, and a final romance between a shy schoolmarm and an adventurer after WWII are just some of the stories contained within a long narrative made compelling by a large cast of lovingly rendered characters. Though she occasionally stumbles with odd attempts at colloquialism (Snipes, you miserable toady), Ryan generally avoids the weightiness that can mar this genre. An admirable first effort.-- Copyright © 2000 Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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