The setting is 1860s Shenandoah, North Carolina at the Rosewood Cotton Plantation. Sixteen year old Katie Burchard and her half black cousin Mayme, have been keeping a very serious secret. Both of their families had been killed by marauders after the Civil War. Katie and Mayme, along with former slave children, have been running Rosewood all by themselves. Fooling everyone in town to think their families were still alive and well. Soon, their charade is over when Katie's uncle showed up to find out for himself what was going on and eventually finds out the truth. But when he tried to make a claim on the plantation and send Katie and her friends away, another uncle showed up with the original deed that had been signed over to him years before. Apparantly, Katie's parents knew that other uncle would come and try to make a claim.
This is a story of great human kindness, hatred, and racism. A time when blacks were very recently freed from slavery, but not by any means free. A story of determination and dedication to accomplish a sisterhood of love. This book is part of a series titled: The Shenandoah Sisters. I have not read the previous books in the series but plan to soon.
Michael Phillips is a Christian novelist who has written more than four dozen novels with sales over five million copies. This book was published in 2004 by Bethany House Publishers. I believe it was written for young adults but I enjoyed it very much.
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