Helpful Score: 5
This is an interesting look into the lives of early mormon sister-wives. The author allows you to view what life was like in the rugged west during the mid 19th century. it is well written, giving beautiful descriptions of the barren west. Freeman does a wonderful job of bringing to life three of John D. Lee's numerous wives. If you are like me and know nothing about this man and the Mountain Meadows Massacre this book explains a lot about that event and also about Bringham Young. The three wives are Emma; an English woman that converted and was much younger than Lee but fell in love with him. Ann, a girl he married when she was just 13 that had a wild spirit for adventure. And Rachel, the sister of his very first wife and who became a sister-wife to her own mother when Lee married that woman to 'save her soul'. I enjoyed this book and was fascinated by the inside look at a polygamous family.
Helpful Score: 4
Fascinating look into pioneer life in the mid-1800s. The author had the journals of the three real women to refer to as she researched this historical novel.
... It is beautifully written. It can invoke such strong emotions.
It is not a book about the Mountain Meadows Massacre... It is a book about three very different women who were involved in a polygamous marriage to one of the most strong willed and charismatic men of the time.
It is their stories of survive in a harsh place and in harsh times. Whether you agree with the doctrine of the Mormon Church of the time is irrelevant. This is a wonderfully written book of three women who along with the other Mormon women of the time changed the face of the west forever.
This book is more than worth your time and effort to read.
This is very well written and very well researched. It is a small insight to what Mormonism was under the eye of Smith and Young while it was still a living entity. It is also a beautiful insight to some of the most harsh and spectacular places on earth. amazon reviews
... It is beautifully written. It can invoke such strong emotions.
It is not a book about the Mountain Meadows Massacre... It is a book about three very different women who were involved in a polygamous marriage to one of the most strong willed and charismatic men of the time.
It is their stories of survive in a harsh place and in harsh times. Whether you agree with the doctrine of the Mormon Church of the time is irrelevant. This is a wonderfully written book of three women who along with the other Mormon women of the time changed the face of the west forever.
This book is more than worth your time and effort to read.
This is very well written and very well researched. It is a small insight to what Mormonism was under the eye of Smith and Young while it was still a living entity. It is also a beautiful insight to some of the most harsh and spectacular places on earth. amazon reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Insightful perspectives told by three of the wives of John D. Lee. Each woman's story so different and each pulls you in. Interesting views of the Mountain Meadows massacre. if you enjoy historical fiction you'll enjoy this book.
Helpful Score: 1
"Red Water" is the story of the life of John D. Lee as told by three of his nineteen wives. I enjoyed this book very much!