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Loading... The Peasant's Dreamby Melanie Dickerson
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I love books that sweep me away and Melanie Dickerson never fails to help me get away from the real-life problems. This is the 11th book in a series, so I have had a hard time keeping the past characters straight, but the family in the book is so wholesome and supportive. This story is intended to be a Cinderella retelling, and the key Cinderella elements are there, although they are sometimes gender-swapped or given more depth. I don't think I would have seen the Cinderella connection without the explicit mention in the blurb. My favorite part of this book was how the dialogue between the characters fit the time period. The best historical romance books feel like an escape to another time period and these ones even transform you into a princess. I think I will always find these books to help me feel like a more wholesome person. The Peasants Dream is a reverse re imagining of Cinderella, fairy tale romance. Sweet wholesome story of friendship, sacrifice and finding and developing a gifting. Adela is in search of true love and torn in fulfilling her duties and doing the right thing. She has a duty to marry and that does not guarantee a love match. But Adela wants more of a relationship, a kinship, a love match. Adela youngest daughter of Duke of Hagenheim, is artistry gifted, meets her soul mate, a talented wood carver named Frederic. Frederic is a hard worker, protector of his family and has a dream to be a wood carver. He honors his abusive father by working the land for his family. He also watches out for and protects his mother and sisters from their father. Shows Frederic doing the right thing even though it is beyond hard. Then Adela meets Frederic. She sees his beautiful wood carvings. Adela is amazed at how he understands the way she sees the world. They have an instant kinship and joy of the arts. She keeps her identity a secret as to stay on his level. Adela does not want to scare him off. This is an engaging, delightful read, with themes of family, faith, hard work, love, spousal abuse, and forgiveness. Has a gratifying ending with a complex well developed plot and characters root for. This is the 11th book in the Hageniterm saga series. But reads as a satisfying stand alone. Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255 “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising” Nora St. Laurent TBCN Where Book Fun Begins! The Book Club Network blog www.bookfun.org This may be unpopular opinion, but sometimes it’s just time for a series to end. And with the eleventh book, Melanie Dickerson’s Hagenheim Series comes to a close. Toted as a reverse Cinderella story, The Peasant’s Dream matches Cinderella in two ways. Frederick is a peasant who is while forced by his father to work and he has two stepsisters. When he meets Adela, he does not realize she is the daughter of a duke. Dickerson made sure to include all of her previous characters in this one (mostly just Adela reminiscing about her siblings or thinking about their families now), which will please long-time fans but also maybe frustrate new readers. The plot was predictable but had some high points. Adela and Frederick become fast friends, encouraging each other but can true friendship be born when one of the parties is hiding a secret? The romance between these two flows naturally into the story, though. Dickerson also tackles difficult topics like abuse, alcoholism, and more in this one. While not my favorite in the series (the second half has been hit and miss for me), The Peasant’s Dream is a satisfying wrap-up. Disclosure statement: I voluntarily reviewed a complimentary copy of this book and was not required to write a positive review. All opinions are my own. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesHagenheim (11)
Romance.
Folklore.
Young Adult Fiction.
Young Adult Literature.
HTML: The duke's daughter, Adela, masquerades as a peasant for a small taste of freedom . . . until she falls in love with a commoner who has no idea who she really is. In this reverse reimagining of the Cinderella story, secrets and dangerous enemies threaten a fairy-tale romance. Adela, daughter of the powerful Duke of Hagenheim, is rarely allowed outside the castle walls. Longing for freedom, one day she sneaks away to the market disguised as a peasant. There, she meets a handsome young woodcarver named Frederick. Frederick is a poor farmer and the sole provider for his family, and he often has to defend his mother from his father's drunken rages. He dreams of making a living carving beautiful images into wood, and he is thrilled when the Bishop of Hagenheim commissions him to carve new doors for the cathedral. As Frederick works on the project, he and Adela meet almost daily, and it doesn't take long for them to fall in love. Even as their relationship grows, her true identity remains hidden from him, and he believes she is a commoner like him. When disaster separates them, Adela and Frederick find themselves caught in the midst of deceptions far more dangerous than innocent disguises. As the powerful lords set against them proceed with their villainous plans, secrets emerge that put Frederick and Adela's future at risk. Full-length, clean fairy-tale reimagining The final Hagenheim story; can be read as a stand-alone Also by Melanie Dickerson: The Golden Braid, The Silent Songbird, and The Orphan's Wish.No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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One thing that is always fantastic in Dickerson's books is her prose. It has been consistent throughout the entire series and this book did not fail to meet expectations.
I fully expected this series to go out with a bang but alas, it did not. I know that I am always hit and miss for Ms. Dickerson's books, but this one was a miss, although there were some parts that I enjoyed. The story was a good idea but the characters were what people expect of lovestruck teenagers.
Also, this was quite the love-at-first-sight story. Adela and Frederick know each other for only a short time before they decide that they love each other, against the wishes of Adela's parents.
Rating: 3.5/5
Crude Language: N/A
Romance: quite a bit of kissing
Spiritual: both characters have strong faith
Violence: Frederick's father is a drunk who regularly beat him and his mother
*I received a complimentary copy of this novel from the publisher. All thoughts are my own and a positive review was not required. ( )