A Sojourner Christmas Kick-Off Package
About the Book
Book: A Sojourner Christmas
Author: Linda Brooks Davis
Genre: Historical
Release date: March 17, 2021
She relinquished her childhood home. Abandoned her former life. And set off for a faraway valley that’s touted as magical. As an aspiring newspaper reporter, Blossom Evans expects to find plenty of material with which to carve out a career.
But alarming tales about the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas abound. Barely tamed, rugged brush land. Mexican bandits. Wildcats, rattlesnakes, and tarantulas as big around as dinner plates. Where will she find the courage to face—and overcome—such foes, even for her dream career?
The first hint of an answer lies in the sleepy little West Texas town of Winters. An unexpected conflict is brewing, one that could launch a reporter’s career—or crush it before it begins. How will Blossom be lured into the fray? And where will she find the temerity to confront this particular brand of evil? It’s Christmas Eve 1923, and Blossom Evans is about to discover what’s she made of.
My Review:
SPOILER ALERT! I am going to give away a major plot twist in this book. I have a specific reason for that and will explain why I decided to do this a little further down in this review.
I like this author. She has the ability to tell a wonderful story and I am enjoying traveling along with the McFarland family on their journey from Oklahoma to find their new home in Texas. I’m looking forward to more about their travels to their new home. I did like this book and thought it showed the family’s heart of compassion for others and their Christian values.
SO—HERE’S THE SPOILER. DO NOT READ FURTHER IF YOU DON’T WANT TO KNOW THE PLOT TWIST.
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First, please note this: This section of the book is appropriately written, and the author tells this part of the story very well. It recounts a period of history which was shameful, cruel, and criminal. I’m not saying in any way that the author should not have included this in her book. This section of the book should be a motivator for us to love others as Christ loves us.
I am giving away this spoiler because the publisher’s description of the book does NOT mention this in any way: A large section of this story describes the McFarland family’s attempt to rescue a family from the KKK. There is some suspenseful, harrowing action in this part of the story and there’s an attempted hanging. My main concern is that reading the account of this type of violence in a fictional setting could be an emotional trigger for someone. I strongly believe a mention of this should be in the publisher’s description for that reason. But kudos to the author for telling this story in the compassionate way that she did.
I received a copy of this book from the publisher. All opinions are my own.
Click here to get your copy!
About the Author
Linda Brooks Davis was born and reared on a farm in Raymondville, a small Rio Grande Valley community in the southernmost tip of Texas. She retired in 2008 after forty years as a special educator and administrator and now writes inspirational historical fiction from her home in San Antonio, Texas. Readers may contact Linda through her website, www.lindabrooksdavis.com.
More from Linda
Something to Write Home About
“People don’t come better than the Pyles,” my mother would often say about her mother Ella’s family. And I believed her.
Years ago—1967 to be exact—Mother finally convinced me to put pen to paper and tell the Pyle family tale about their winter of 1923-24 migration from central Oklahoma to the southernmost tip of Texas. In covered wagons. The process turned me into a family history buff.
My mother was our family’s “keeper,” and she passed the moniker to me. Fortunately, I now share her interest in our Pyle ancestors’ backstories. I delight in finding treasures—photos, stories, anecdotes, and documents—from our family tree.
At the present time, I’m going through trunks, bins, and boxes of family mementos that extend into the nineteenth century and even further. Each item sparks dreams of what forebearers’ lives truly might have been. What were their secret longings and loves? What dreams did they withhold from others? What tragedies did they endure, and how did they survive them?
One Pyle dream that became reality was migrating from central Oklahoma to the Lower Rio Grande Valley in the southernmost tip of Texas. They had heard stories about soil so fertile and climate so ideal that the area was called the Magic Valley.
Land developers in the Valley were as busy as bees in citrus orchards, doing all they could to convince folks in the Midwest to buy land in the Texas Magic Valley, and the newcomers came. Among them, my mother’s Pyle clan. In the deep winter of 1923-24, the Pyles sold their land and belongings and acquired 8 covered wagons and the horses to pull them. On December 17, 1923, they headed southward toward their dreams.
On Christmas Eve a week later, the family arrived in Winters, Texas, a windswept community south of Abilene in West Texas where ranchers and farmers populated the countryside. Since the advent of the train and automobile, cross-country travel in covered wagons had become an oddity. And the Pyles did feel a bit odd—especially when someone mistook them for Gypsies and bought the Pyle children Christmas presents.
Fast-forward sixty years. My mother possessed a crusader streak and rarely hesitated before acting on it. Fifty years after the wagon trail adventure, she acted—without hesitation—when a young farm worker told her someone was involved in the drug trade on her land.
Soon she knew the sound of the engine and general description of the car that crept down the dirt road past our house in the dark of night for no apparent reason. Mother, the Super Sleuth, wanted to share the make and license number with the local police, so she and the young farm worker devised a plan.
On the appointed night, the same car inched past our house, around the corner of an adjoining twenty-acre parcel. Mother and her partner headed, stooped and trembling, across a dark field of cotton toward the now distant red taillights of the suspicious car.
“I need to get close enough to find the make of the car and the license number,” Mother said as she drew near the car, which had stopped in the middle of the dirt road. As she raised up, another set of headlights flashed down the road, and she flopped onto the dirt cotton row. But the second set of headlights brightened their hiding place like the noonday sun.
“Follow me,” Super Sleuth whisper-shouted to her compadre. Both tumbled into a drainage ditch that separated the field from the road. Out of sight—but terrifyingly near danger—the pair dug their fingers into the damp soil and pressed their faces into the slimy growth, praying no one would see them. And that no creepy creature would attack.
Several men, some blinding white in the lights and others black as tar in the shadows, met in the space between the two idling cars and made their exchange. Mother peeked above a prickly weed and caught the makes of both vehicles. And she and her partner memorized partial plate numbers.
Thankfully, the drug dealers went their separate ways, leaving Super Sleuth and her partner to make their way back home. In the pitch-black night. Across acres of growth that snatched at their cotton skirts. Amid clusters of swarming insects. And through strips of undeveloped land that harbored rattlesnakes.
Trembling from the adrenalin surge but armed with tidbits of important information, the two piled into Mother’s car and raced to the Sheriff’s Office. She submitted a report about the incident, complete with the cars’ identifying details, and returned home so grateful not to have been discovered that she fell into a deep sleep.
I drew upon these memories for the writing of A Sojourner Christmas. The McFarland clan does, indeed, set out across country in a team of covered wagons as my Pyle relations did. And they pull into Winters, Texas on the twenty-fourth of December 1923, just as my Pyle forebearers did. They were mistaken for Gypsies and were surprised with Christmas presents from the townsfolk, as are the McFarlands.
While in Winters, Blossom Evans entangles herself in a dangerous affair, one that my Super Sleuth mother would have joined if she could. I can imagine Mother and Blossom heading out across a windswept field in pursuit of bootleggers in 1923. Or drug dealers in 1983. Or …
I hope A Sojourner Christmas meets Mother’s heavenly approval. I hope the same for readers.
Blog Stops
Inklings and notions, July 24
For Him and My Family, July 25
Mary Hake, July 25
deb’s Book Review, July 26
Lighthouse Academy, July 27 (Guest Review from Marilyn Ridgway)
Library Lady’s Kid Lit, July 27
Locks, Hooks and Books, July 28
Abba’s Prayer Warrior Princess, July 29
Connect in Fiction, July 29
lakesidelivingsite, July 29
Ashley’s Clean Book Reviews, July 30
Connie’s History Classroom, July 31
Pause for Tales, July 31
She Lives To Read, August 1
A Modern Day Fairy Tale, August 2
Musings of a Sassy Bookish Mama, August 3
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, August 4
Texas Book-aholic, August 5
Happily Managing a Household of Boys, August 5
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, August 6
Splashes of Joy, August 6
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Linda is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Amazon gift card and a copy of the book!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/11031/a-sojourner-christmas-celebration-tour-giveaway
I bet this is amazing! Thank you for sharing!
I respect an author who is brave enough to write historical fiction truthfully.
Thank you for featuring this book. Sounds like a good book.
This book sounds like an excellent read.
Thank you for sharing your wonderful review! Sounds like one not to miss.