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Type of bind: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN num: 9780942407723
ISBN number: 0942407725
Label: Father & Son Publishing
Manufacturer: Father & Son Publishing
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 352
Printing Date: 2004-04
Publishing house: Father & Son Publishing
Sale Popularity Level: 1965726
Studio: Father & Son Publishing
Editor's Notes and Comments:
Product Description:
Homestead by Betsy Bishop Thomas gives an intimate look at the struggles and triumphs of people living in rural Northwest Florida in the late 1800s.
With no conveniences at their rustic, hand-built homes, and with outside communication only by horseriders or the firing of a gun to indicate an emergency, people turned inward - relying on their families almost entirely.
The nearest doctor is many hours away by horseback. Trips to a faraway towns store or to an equally faraway church are rare. Letters sent to or from the post office might be months reaching their destination.
Their food comes almost entirely from animals and poultry raised on the homestead and crops grown on the acreage. Bathing is done in a washtub, when theres enough rainwater.
The women work just as hard as the men - sometimes inside the houses, sometimes outside in the fields and the barns. Gossip is pervasive, perhaps an entertaining respite from the rigors of daily life. Yet, when trouble looms or help is needed, neighbors rally.
Thomas follows the lives of Nate and Melissa York, from the time of their meeting, through their marriage with all its hardships and difficulties, including the death of their very first baby, up until the time their home becomes a haven for children previously mistreated in other environments.
Nate cant read or write, but Melissa, 17 years younger, teaches him, and both eventually come to share a full understanding of religious faith after a series of tragedies and mishaps tests their beliefs.
But while Nate and Melissa may get top billing, the roster of other people also is large. The authors narrative peels back the many layers of the various characters heroics, as well as their shortcomings and perversities, demonstrating, sometimes graphically, that these 'good old days' were all too often something far from good.
Not all the characters are human. There is Dewey, Nates horse, in particular, who is truly like a brother to the man, whose parents lost their lives in a criminal attack when he was just a child.
Overall, its an interesting read, not just for those who may have been raised in rural environments, but for anyone who likes to explore character development interwoven with a regional lifestyle, speech patterns and culture
User popularity level:

Rated by buyers
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Homestead took me to a different place and time. I've always been curious about my own family history and could only imagine how things must have been in earlier times and the challenges people faced settling our nation. Betsy Thomas smartly crafts a gripping tale about homesteaders, Nate and Melissa, taking you on a virtual tour of their lives in the mid 1800's. I found a sense of wonder at how people looked out after one another in a time when danger and survival were a way of life. Neighbors giving of themselves from what very little they had and a longing for that kind of community today. I actually read the whole book in one day as I found myself turning page after page, smiling at times, tearful at others. I know I will revisit Catawba from time to time and I know you'll want to too!
Rated by buyers
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Betsy Bishop Thomas brings to life the raw, hardscrabble frontier of pineywoods West Florida in her revealing novel, Homestead, published by Father & Son Publishing, Ltd., Tallahassee. And her subtitle tells it all: An Epic Rich With Emotion In the Post Civil War South.
Rather than merely imaginative writing, Thomas craftily turns her own family ancestry-dating from her grandfather's homesteading in the Florida Panhandle in the 1800s-into the real hard but rewarding life in the region centering on Santa Rosa County. Here characters are delicately sculpted from the realities of the time when pioneers drew their sustenance from the precious closeness of the land, and its many laborious hardships tested in their beliefs and faith in God and the Hereafter.
More, she's crafted a touching love story and the evolution of a family, tracing the lives of Nate and Melissa York from their quick courtship, marriage, death of a their very first child, and building a home that serves as a haven for other youngsters once dogged by mistreatment by others. There are many layers on trouble and conflict involving other interesting characters flooding their wilderness lives. And in their travail-including building a homestead and a church, an illicit affair, revenge, murder on the Yellow River, a fire that nearly claims their lives-they grow toward as shared common religious faith that is the central theme of their human values.
Yet the real value of Thomas' epic comes from the detailed hardships of their struggle and the speech patterns and wilderness culture-word pictures capturing the old lost times the westernmost corner of the Florida Panhandle, also illustrated a profusion of telling sketches by artist Georgia Williams.
Peggy May of the Northwest Florida Daily News says of Homestead: "Overall, an interesting read, with the author peeling back many layers of various characters' heroics, as well as their shortcomings and perversities, demonstrating, sometimes graphically, that the 'good old days' were sometimes far from good."
The author captures the essence of her revealing, trouble-laden story in the concluding lines: "The house was safe, too, and when Nate thought about it a little more on the way to the house, he knew he couldn't leave. After all, they were keepers of the land. They were strong, hearty stock who had their God to see them through, They were homesteaders, and they would never leave!"
A Florida State University graduate and retired Florida social worker residing in the Fort Walton Beach area, Betsy Thomas casts in fictional structure many of the experiences of her ancestors, yet she's quick to point out most elements of the story are entirely imaginary. Besides an FSU journalism degree, Thomas earned a Master's in Public Administration at the University of West Florida in Pensacola.
Rated by buyers
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With her gifted pen, Betsy Thomas takes us back to the time of homesteading in the Florida Panhandle. We live with Hank and Melissa in their little cabin, sharing their toil and pleasures in the everyday style of the era. We have no nextdoor neighbors, but family can be summoned by bell, or gunshot, in time of need. All the characters have individual personalities marked with virtues and weaknesses that make them real. The story line moves forward building interest page by page.
Thus, with a setting carefully researched; characters that are true to life; and a story to tell, we have a book to enjoy from beginning to end.
Rated by buyers
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I started this book with the idea that it was a book about the past that would simply serve as a History lesson. WOW was I wrong. What a History lesson I got!!! The author got inside of my head and planted visions of the characters and their surroundings. For three days (thats all it took me to read it because I couldn't put it down) I lived with the characters.I began to think of them as real people and became enthrawled by their lives and the drama surrounding them. I began to look at my everyday life in a whole new way. Great read!!! Recommended!
Rated by buyers
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From the very first page, this book takes the reader to another place and time. The characters are described and developed so well that they become real and the reader becomes emotionally attached and unable to put the book down. I found myself late for apointments, and buring dinner because I was so wrapped up in what was happening to Nate, Melissa, their friends and families. Just when I thought I knew what was about to happen, the author would throw a curve. Homestead gives the reader insight into Southern life in the mid 1800's in a most unique and intertaining way. This book has it all and is perfect for summer reading or a special gift. My new favorite!
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