The Only Best Place (Holmes Crossing), by Carolyne Aarsen
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The Only Best Place (Holmes Crossing), by Carolyne Aarsen
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Shaky marriage. Failing business. Leslie desperately wants to fix both. She's not so sure her husband's solution of moving back into the bosom of the family and family farm back in Holmes Crossing. As daughter of an alcoholic single mom who thought six months in one area was an extended stay, Leslie is not so much with the extended family interactions. But they seem to have no choice so they pack up their two children and off to cows, chickens and Holmes Crossing they go. Leslie and Dan had agreed it was only for a year so they could reconnect and retrench financially. But once he’s back he starts making noises about staying. A near tragedy challenges Leslie’s ideas about family and community and faith and Leslie has to decide if this truly is The Only Best Place for her and her heart.
The Only Best Place (Holmes Crossing), by Carolyne Aarsen- Published on: 2015-11-17
- Released on: 2015-11-17
- Format: Kindle eBook
From Publishers Weekly The heroine of this charming novel, the first in a series, is Leslie VandeKeere, who unhappily follows her husband hundreds of miles to Montana. There, they will be helping out on his family farm for a year, after which the VandeKeeres plan to return to their glitzier urban life in Seattle. Shortly after their arrival in Montana, however, Leslie begins to notice certain changes in her husband: he starts going to church with his family and seems quite happy to be pulled back into the fold of his mother and sisters. Leslie doesn't fancy this transformation, and she doesn't like his designs to stay in Montana forever. The plot has few surprises and is in fact an old chestnut of faith fiction: cosmopolitan sophisticates find faith, family ties and purpose in a small town. But Aarsen's strong character development makes up for that, as readers will find themselves feeling sympathetic for, and seeing things from the viewpoint of, nearly every character. There are a few slips—Leslie wants nothing to do with the Christian subculture, yet she casually invokes Gary Chapman's "five love languages," a tidbit of evangelical-speak that a secular urbanite like Leslie wouldn't know. Nonetheless, this promising new series in Christian fiction is sure to find many fans. (Sept. 18) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
About the Author Since selling her first book in 1997, Carolyne Aarsen has published numerous mass market titles with Steeple Hill and has more coming. Her stories reflect a love of God, family, and rural life. When not writing, she enjoys knitting, scrapbooking, and eating chocolate (who doesn't?). She lives in Alberta, Canada, with her husband and children.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful. a lesson in life By Reader Views Reviewed by Kristina Patton for Reader Views (9/06)In today's society, any mention of God, faith, or Bible passages is seen as taboo or politically incorrect. But, in Carolyn Aarsen's "The Only Best Place", one woman who used to think that way is suddenly believing in something outside of her realm.Leslie Vandekeere finds herself relocating by force. This new community, a farming community, is extremely different from the hustle and bustle of her life in Seattle. While trying to find some normalcy in her new life, Leslie is constantly looking to the future when she and her family can go back to Seattle. When Leslie finally lets go and begins to appreciate her surroundings, she begins an amazing transformation of character. Instead of looking to the future, she begins to take her husband's words into consideration, "We don't know how long anything lasts, but have learned to appreciate each day we have together."Aarsen's characters are realistic and true to everyday life. There are many ways that people could identify with the main character; being a working mother, being in a marriage that is hanging on by a thread, and dealing with a meddling mother-in-law. I'm positive that there are people out there who can identify with the struggle for truth, the struggle for what is real and what to believe. Leslie's transition is so smooth and believable, like it could happen to anyone.A common cliché comes to mind after reading this book: When you hit rock bottom you can only go up. In order to get to a comfortable place in her life, Leslie had to realize that she would have to give her troubles to a God she didn't know. As she learns new ways to "let go", she learns a new way to live and love life.Carolyne Aarsen does a wonderful job at portraying most women's fears: losing her family, her children, her dreams, and most importantly a fear of losing her identity to the one thing she knows nothing about....faith.Aarsen transforms a woman who believes she is losing her life as she knows it, to a woman who comes to terms with the fact that dreams can change. As a woman who sometimes, uncharacteristically, doubts my own faith and my own future, I have learned that this book is meant to be a lesson in life. A lesson that will show any woman that there is always hope and there is a bright side to every situation. Through a new family, a new community, and new beliefs, Aarsen has taught me that, with a little faith, God will provide. The only thing that I ask is that He provide Ms. Aarsen with a swift pen......I need the next book!Book received free of charge.
112 of 138 people found the following review helpful. Don't be fooled -- this is NOT a Christian novel! By Meg Brunner Oh man, this book made me really, really angry. It started out pretty entertaining, which is why I ended up reading the whole thing, despite the misgivings that started to kick in right around page 200 (which, right around page 250, slowly began to turn from simple misgivings to stunned horror). It's about a young married couple, Dan and Leslie, who are struggling with a variety of issues in their marriage (infidelity on the husband's part, and a loss of their business in Seattle) when they decide the best thing to do for their finances and their family of four (two kids) is to go live on the farm where Dan grew up. The farm, in Montana, has been struggling for a while, and Dan wants to return -- for a year only, he promises -- to help his mother get the farm back into good shape so she can sell it. Leslie is 100% city girl, an emergency room nurse and a lover of Seattle, and she agrees to the move as long as Dan swears -- really swears -- that it's temporary, that he'll be compensated for the work he does to the farm, and that they will not touch the thirty-thousand or so dollars they've worked so hard to save for their dream house.The problems start almost immediately. Leslie doesn't know anything about farming, and Dan's mother and one of his sisters are overbearing, judgmental, and just outright nasty people to be around. Everything Leslie does is wrong, and she feels lambasted and criticized at every turn, with no one there who truly supports her, including her husband. Speaking of her husband, Dan gets back to the farm and almost immediately begins to renege on every promise he made to his wife -- including essentially robbing the dream house account of $19K, without talking to Leslie first, so he can buy a tractor, and telling Leslie he has decided he does not want to return to Seattle. He doesn't support his wife's struggles against his mother's callousness, and when Leslie decides she wants to return to work at the local hospital, the one place where she does feel she fits in, he acts like a big stupid baby about it and essentially tells her doing so will destroy their family.Things go rapidly downhill from there. By the end of the book, Leslie has turned into a Stepford Wife, suddenly turning to religion (turns out, this is a Christian book, though after finishing it, I'm pretty dubious that its author actually knows a damn thing about Christian values) and falling in love with the farming life and her husband all over again. The reason this SO sickened me was because it made me realize that all along, Leslie was actually being portrayed sort of as the enemy of Christian ethics. She wanted to work instead of care for her children -- well, she'll soon learn that's not acceptable. She didn't want to go to church -- well, she'll soon learn the option is being alone and miserable. She wanted a husband who honored and respected her, instead of failing to support her, cheating on her, and flat-out stealing the money she'd worked so hard to earn for their future -- well, she'll soon learn she's to OBEY her husband, and that questioning his actions only leads to marital strife and unhappiness. She didn't like the judgmental way she was treated by her husband's mother -- well, she'll soon learn that his mother was RIGHT and that she ought to listen to her more often. Not only that, two characters in the book start out acting like non-Christians, and that's when they're supportive of Leslie, and then radically reveal themselves to be Christians after all, immediately snatching back their support of Leslie in the process (I'm referring to Dan and Kathy here, if you've read the book). What is this really telling us about Christian values, I ask you? The "good" Christians in this novel are mean, duplicitous, judgmental, and, in Dan's case, adulterers and thieves. The "bad" Christians (Leslie, e.g.) are struggling to do all the things that are actually good, in my opinion -- trying to raise her kids to be happy and making decisions based on what's best for them instead of what her mother-in-law wants, trying to maintain her own personal identity while also fueling her relationships and marriage, trying to adapt to a radical change in her lifestyle to support her spouse, etc.All in all, this novel left me feeling queasy and utterly, completely offended. I think all Christians should be outraged by the message of this novel, and that goes double for any Christians who are also feminists (and yes, there actually are Christian feminists!). Ugh, I can't believe I held this book in my hands and found myself ENJOYING it for the first half. I think I need a shower.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful. it was easy to place myself in Leslie's shoes By Michelle Beattie Carolyne Aarsen really nailed the angst of her heroine. As a mother of two myself, it was easy to place myself in Leslie's shoes. I felt her frustration, her loss of identity and purpose. It's hard to have a family, marriage and career all at the same time and Ms. Aarsen easily and skillfully portrayed all the emotions a mother goes through to keep her family together.
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