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Lake In The Clouds (2003)

Lake in the Clouds (2003)

Book Info

Author
Series
Rating
4.31 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
0553582798 (ISBN13: 9780553582796)
Language
English
Publisher
bantam

About book Lake In The Clouds (2003)

What will we do to squeeze in time for our cherished historical sagas? I'm finally getting back to the WILDERNESS series by Sara Donati. What's on your mountain? Read this review and more about historical reading at my blog, the TBR Mountain Range. Being able to travel along with some of the same characters throughout the WILDERNESS series is like visiting with old friends. Sara Donati writes a colorful novel that takes you on a historical journey with her characters as your guide. You can't help but love them, as well as hope that the villains will get what they justly deserve. The world comes alive and personally, I can picture it as if it were my own.LAKE IN THE CLOUDS was everything I'd hoped for and I was surprised by how easily the details from the previous two books came back without re-reading. I'm sure my enjoyment would have been enhanced had I re-read the first two books, but it's a tribute to how much I enjoyed them to have the details come back so readily. I especially enjoyed the focus on Hannah, who is half Native American, and her training as a healer in LAKE IN THE CLOUDS. Hannah has to face prejudice against women working in the medical field when it's a white male dominated calling during the early 1800s. She has professional backing and encouragement, but there are still those who scoff at her abilities. Her Native American looks and being female are just two obstacles she faces. Her involvement with a runaway slave adds more suspense and emotions of the times. Add in a man who suits her perfectly, as well as challenges her, and Hannah has much to contend with as she grows into a woman.This novel's underlying message of treating people as equals is especially poignant for this time period. I especially liked the idea that the Bonners gather all people to them, forming a community based on their relationships rather than race or where they've come from. There are plenty who don't believe in the Bonner family's outlook, so even if it does sound Utopian in theory, they don't give in when tested. Their heartache is easily felt when their lives intertwine with others, even when they know becoming involved might risk their lives or the lives of their families. Expect to shed a few tears because I found many of their struggles emotionally riveting.Sara Donati's WILDERNESS series is so vivid that you can't help but picture it as if you're watching THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS movie. When an author can make me see their books as a movie while I'm reading them, then I know I've found books that will stay with me for a lifetime.Now I'm ready to move on to book four, FIRE ALONG THE SKY, and savor it for as long as possible. Heartfelt thanks to Sara Donati for giving us such an engrossing series to anticipate and appreciate. I just wish I had more time to devote to the series so that I could hurry to the end and then start the books all over again!

I think this is my favorite book of the series so far. As a recap (and spoiler if you haven't read the first few books) Elizabeth was a spinster woman who came to America to teach school. However, she meets Nathaniel Bonner and falls in love and together they must elope and find a way to restore property back to its rightful owners, the Mahican. When this has settled they are inexplicably rushed to Scotland to rescue their twins who have been kidnapped. An earl there wants an heir and Nathaniel's son could be it. It leaves with Nathaniel discovering a long lost son who decides to go in his place and they return home to America.This book has to deal with runaway slaves, smallpox, and other adventures. When Hannah (Nathaniel's daughter) and Elizabeth find a sickly runaway in the woods that is linked to Curiosity (another character in all three books) they know they have to help her gain her freedom and get to Canada. Hannah though is being sent by the local doctor Richard Todd to study in New York on how to give smallpox vaccinations. Though she is half Indian and a woman, she is regarded as a curiosity in New York and allowed to continue her studies. She brings the method back to Paradise with her to inoculate the people there. But unfortunately no one is ever content to let everybody bring happy and strife and lawsuits soon come along.Donati's writing is always very clear. Luckily in this book she returns to explaining what some of her accents and different languages mean instead of leading it to the reader to try to figure out. There is plenty of description and once again it is written in the third person.Most of the story is told about Nathaniel's daughter, Hannah, this time. I really like her character and actually enjoy hearing about her more than I do the rest of the Bonners. To be honest, I can't stand the twins. I feel that they were just used as a filler and not very fleshed out by Donati. Elizabeth and Nathaniel take a back seat in this book so their characters are also a little faded away.Regardless though, it was an interesting book and a good look at what happened in the times back then. The issues of slavery and disease are ones that everyone is familiar with. I definitely recommend this book.Lake in the CloudsCopyright 2002610 pages

Do You like book Lake In The Clouds (2003)?

This third book in Sara Donati's "Wilderness" series is so much better than the second one. It focuses on Hannah, Elizabeth and Nathaniel's wise "half-breed [sic]" eldest daughter, as she grows into a woman, a healer, and eventually a wife. She leaves Lake in the Clouds, her home, and ventures into New-York in 1802 to the Kine-Pox Institute to learn about White (O'Seronni) medicine, especially the new "inoculation" which promises to protect against smallpox. As always, Donati has done her research, and she uses her formidable writing ability to paint amazing pictures of early Manhattan and also to unflinchingly address the rampant and flagrant racism and classism that were the order of the day. When Hannah returns to her family home, events develop that test her wisdom, strength, and competence as a healer. Maybe it's just because I'm feeling sentimental on this 15th anniversary of my Father's death, but the closing chapters of "Lake in the Clouds" brought me to tears. Hannah's loving extended family, consisting of Africans, Native Americans and Europeans, along with an inner strength bequeathed to her by her ancestors, see her through false accusations and bring the book to a triumphant end. But there is more to come... I just found out there are more volumes in this series. Thought I was done. Maybe not.
—Karen

A decade has passed since this series last left off after Dawn on a Distant Shore and much has changed, not so much for the Bonners… though life has certainly continued for the family in that they have loved, lost, and aged… but in how Donati explores the Bonners’ story. Nathaniel and Elizabeth are now supporting characters. Consequently, much of the book’s action is presented from different perspectives – familiar in characterization but strangers in voice.Primarily, the novel is split into three distinct sections. The first focuses upon a runaway slave and what her presence in Paradise means for the Bonners and the Freemans. Nathaniel and Elizabeth go into the wilderness once more to guide the woman and her unborn child to safety, knowingly bringing danger into their own family’s life. Next, Hannah leaves Paradise for New York City, traveling with an ill Kitty and Ethan, to gain smallpox vaccination training. Finally, these two portions of the novel culminate in the third when both parties return home only to be thrust into a simmering racial battle fraught with revenge, secrets, and new relationships. To coincide with these three distinct portions of Lake in the Clouds, there are three main narrators: Hannah, Lily, and Jemima Southern – a recently blossomed woman, a child looking for her direction in life, and a bitter servant with an ax to grind, respectively.With this introduction to the novel given, it is rather impossible to present a review without bringing the personal into my remarks. It has been nearly three months since I last posted, not because I wasn’t reading during that time but because I wasn’t reading (and finishing) this novel. Instead, I found myself constantly distracted (sometimes willingly and sometimes almost unwillingly) by other reading options. (Hello Downton Abbey fanfic, I’m looking at you.) And this wasn’t because Lake in the Clouds is a horrible or uninteresting book… persay. While I realize this is certainly NOT a stellar recommendation, the truth of the matter is that, for a series which has been, up to this point, quite stellar, Lake in the Clouds was a disappointment, and, because it did not live up to its predecessors, the novel hurt itself by comparison. A separate entity, and I believe I would have finished the work much sooner, but I was disgruntled by the lack of Nathaniel and Elizabeth in Lake in the Clouds, and that disgruntlement just became a lack of interest in regards to new characters not related back to the Bonners’ story, Hannah’s medical endeavors, Lily’s adolescent insights, and Jemima’s interloping presence. One hopes that, next, when there is Fire Along the Sky, Donati will return to what made her series memorable and enjoyable in the first place – that she’ll take her readers back into the wilderness (figuratively) again.
—Charlynn

This was the third book in Donati's Wilderness series. A good deal of this story focuses on the younger citizens of Paradise, particularly Hannah Bonner who is now a young woman. Lily Bonner, one of Elizabeth and Nathaniel's 8 year old twins, is one of the characters that was focused on quite a lot. Her character has been fleshed out; as was Jemima Southern, Moses Southern's daughter. I don't feel that Nathaniel's character had all that much significance in this story, and I got to see a changed Elizabeth (or perhaps a different side of her). Slavery is a recurring topic, as is racial prejudice toward Indians -- especially women. There was a bit of tragedy in this story and there were some interesting and surprising plot developments. Overall, it was an enjoyable read and had a satisfying ending.
—Danielle

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