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A Bride of Convenience

por Jody Hedlund

Séries: Bride Ships (3)

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7623351,225 (4.3)8
Fiction. Romance. Christian Fiction. Historical Fiction. Unemployed mill worker Zoe Hart jumps at the opportunity to emigrate to British Columbia in 1863 to find a better life and be reunited with her brother, who fled from home after being accused of a crime. Pastor to miners in the mountains, Abe Merivale discovers an abandoned baby during a routine visit to Victoria and joins efforts with Zoe, one of the newly arrived bride-ship women, to care for the infant. While there, he's devastated by the news from his fiancee in England that she's marrying another man. With mounting pressure to find the baby a home, Zoe accepts a proposal from a miner of questionable character after he promises to help her locate her brother. Intent on protecting Zoe and frustrated by his failed engagement, Abe offers his own hand as groom. After a hasty wedding, they soon realize their marriage of convenience is not so convenient after all.… (mais)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 21 (seguinte | mostrar todos)
This series has been a favorite so far, and it just keeps getting better!

I've heard of bride ships before, I even read a book with a character's grandmother had gone on a bride ship, this series has show some reasons that women would join a bride ship, and it has been fascinating to learn of these courageous women.

Zoe's and Abe's romance is not the normal historical marriage of convenience. With a darling little orphaned baby, secrets, a missing brother, and a ministry that is held by little but a string, "A Bride of Convenience" is a delightful novel that I highly recommend.

Though there is quite a bit of touchy feely content that makes this book appropriate for 16/18 up.

I voluntarily received and reviewed a complimentary copy of this book which I received from the author. All views expressed are only my honest opinion. ( )
  abigailkayharris | Jan 1, 2024 |
(3.5 / 5)

In the 1860s, women were shipped from England to Victoria, in what is now Canada, to become wives for the bachelors who lived and worked in the British colonies. Author Jody Hedlund imagines what might have happened to some of the women on those ships in her series The Bride Ships. This is book #3 of that series, though can be read as a standalone. Only a day off the ship, Zoe becomes the guardian of an abandoned infant. While a local pastor named Abe attempts to find the baby's father, Zoe resolves to care for the baby herself. But single-motherhood is not only difficult, but nearly impossible in this untamed land. Through a misunderstanding, Zoe and Abe marry and then are faced with the difficult decisions that come from a hasty marriage of convenience.

Marriages of convenience have always been something that draw my attention, especially in a Christian setting. The story of Zoe and Abe and how they get to know each other, become friends, and hope for more, was sweet and captivating. If my rating were based only on that, it would have been at least 4 stars, maybe more. However, my lower rating is because of the physical lust that I had to wade through.

I'll start with the positives, though, because outside of the physical stuff, or if I'd been able to skip over it, I really enjoyed the overall story. I liked both of the main characters as individuals, which seems fairly uncommon in romances I read these days. Abe had some issues being assertive (which I can related to), but found a backbone when it was needed. Zoe was uncertain about her ability to be a "proper" pastor's wife, but had a lot more actionable compassion than she realized. I was able to predict what happened near the end, but would have been pretty surprised about the way the rest of the story had gone if my prediction had not come true. I would actually like to see more of these two, as long as they can keep their physical desires about each other out of the narrative.

So obviously, the fact that Abe and Zoe are married through most of the book is going to involve some physical desires. And because they're married, even though they're still basically strangers, it's okay, right? Sure, I don't have a problem with a husband and wife lusting after each other, even if they've only just met, or if their marriage was not borne of love for each other. And I really appreciate the fact that they were completely respectful of each other, because, as Zoe herself observes, in the confines of being married, Abe may have felt he had the right to take whatever he wanted. But what did bother me was the near-constant leering. More specifically, it's the fairly detailed descriptions of the leering that made me uncomfortable as I read. Just because two people are married doesn't mean I want to hear the details of their love lives, lusts, or desires. Even Abe himself, in the story, finds himself uncomfortable in the presence of his friend and friend's new bride, as they apparently made out in front of him a lot. Just because they're married doesn't mean we all want to watch them enjoying each other.

I'm sure it might seem to some like there's no way around it, given the story presented, but I think that it could have been toned way down. And because this is a Christian book, which will be expected to be clean and okay for younger people, I wanted to make sure to mention this possible issue for others. To be fair, there's nothing I would call explicit, but it's about the closest I can remember reading in a Christian book. From the other reviews, it's clear that I'm in the minority here, but as another reviewer stated, I would not allow my daughter to read this when she's a teenager, and would be very uncomfortable listening to an audiobook of this with any members of my family around.

I hate to say this, because I do think the story was well-written. I have a feeling the other books in this series, maybe others by the author too, likely don't have the same problem (I certainly hope not, at least). But I would have a difficult time recommending this book too widely. If you aren't bothered by this kind of thing and enjoy Christian romance, certainly give it a try. But be careful where you're reading it or listening to it, and please make sure to read it before allowing your teenager to read it.

Thank you to Netgalley and Bethany House for providing me a copy of this book to review. ( )
  Kristi_D | Sep 22, 2023 |
This caught my eye because of a pretty cover and the prospect of a favourite romance trope. It’s an interesting glimpse into an aspect of history I didn’t know about (bride ships), but the pacing didn’t appeal to me -- rushing the characters over things I thought needed to take more time, then dragging it out with scenes I found skimmable -- and I didn’t like something about the story’s tone. ( )
  Herenya | Jun 13, 2021 |
Reading A Bride of Convenience by Jody Hedlund, I wondered how I waited so long to read this book. Hedlund’s The Bride Ships series’ third book was a real pleasure. I enjoyed the history Hedlund accurately wove into the narrative about Canadian mining towns, English brides, and the smallpox epidemic that the Vancouver native Americans endured in the mid-late 1800s. It was sad to see such a great amount of prejudice and mistreatment against the native Americans. Zoe is a great heroine, rising from a ”nobody” to somebody who stands tall because of her character. And then there’s loveable, rather hapless Abe, struggling to figure out exactly what direction God wants his life to take. I felt like Abe was torn between what people such as the Bishop told him he should do, and what God was leading him to actually do. Will Abe choose comfort or honor? My favorite secondary character is Mrs. Moresby. What a difference she made in the brides’ lives.
A Bride of Convenience is a delicious serving of English bride ships and Vancouver history with a side of social commentary wrapped up in compelling romantic prose that will keep you eagerly reading from the first page to last. A complimentary copy of this book was provided by the author and publisher through NetGalley. I am voluntarily leaving this review. All opinions are my own. ( )
  Becky_L | Jan 8, 2021 |
This was a good historical romance. I think I had heard about bride ships from other books or TV, but I hadn't read the previous two books. I liked Zoe and Abe and their budding family. I sort of predicted the ending in my mind. ( )
  eliorajoy | Sep 14, 2020 |
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Fiction. Romance. Christian Fiction. Historical Fiction. Unemployed mill worker Zoe Hart jumps at the opportunity to emigrate to British Columbia in 1863 to find a better life and be reunited with her brother, who fled from home after being accused of a crime. Pastor to miners in the mountains, Abe Merivale discovers an abandoned baby during a routine visit to Victoria and joins efforts with Zoe, one of the newly arrived bride-ship women, to care for the infant. While there, he's devastated by the news from his fiancee in England that she's marrying another man. With mounting pressure to find the baby a home, Zoe accepts a proposal from a miner of questionable character after he promises to help her locate her brother. Intent on protecting Zoe and frustrated by his failed engagement, Abe offers his own hand as groom. After a hasty wedding, they soon realize their marriage of convenience is not so convenient after all.

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