My Loving Vigil Keeping

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AAR reviewed Carla Kelly’s My Loving Vigil Keeping when it first came out. Our reviewer was not happy (you can see that review HERE), and it put me off of trying this book for a long time. Recently, I realized it was included in my Kindle Unlimited, and gave it a shot. Oh, I’m so glad I did.

Della Anders, mistreated orphan relative of the wealthy Anders family of Salt Lake City, takes a teaching position in the mining community of Winter Quarters, Utah, because her own origins lie in a humble mining camp: her mother abandoned her, and her father raised her in poverty until he died in a mining accident. She has learned to shrink herself into the space her family allots her while also enduring the misconceptions of others that she is wealthy and secure. Her plan to be anonymous in Winter Quarters is foiled by the fact that everyone knows the Anders name. What, they think, could she be doing there besides condescending? Slowly, Della begins to make a place for herself in Winter Quarters, supporting students and the community and gaining their respect and affection. Or, in the case of Owen Davies – something even stronger.

Owen came from Wales to mine coal but is also a talented woodcarver. His much-loved wife passed away, leaving him a single father to Angharad, one of Della’s students. He is shy, and for some time, Della remains unsure of his interest. Once Owen declares himself, she can’t face the possibility of loving a man in such a dangerous profession. This is sadly prescient, as My Loving Vigil Keeping culminates in the catastrophic Scofield Mine Disaster, at the time the deadliest mining incident in American history.

I would categorize this book as “historical fiction with strong romantic elements” rather than “romance.” For someone like me, who lives for setting and historical details but does want the comfort of the HEA, it’s a joy. Kelly brings everything her characters touch to vivid life, from the magical holiday displays of Auerbach’s Department Store to the terrifying train ride into Scofield to the centrality of sauna among Winter Quarters’s large Finnish population (where the babies are born, men and women socialize on alternate nights, and where the dead are laid out – except, tragically, there were too many Finns lost at Scofield to fit) I enjoyed learning about the real historical figures in the story, such as “Uncle” Jesse Knight and Richard Evans. Our previous reviewer complained that Della’s rival suitor, physician Emil Isgreen, did not seem like a serious competitor –  that’s possibly because Dr. Isgreen was an actual person and would meet his real wife ten years later!

Both Della and Owen are Mormon, as is the author. I am not, and I still really enjoyed this book and its sequel. The characters live their faith (attending church regularly, tithing, asking for and receiving blessings, using the terms “Brother” and “Sister,” etc) but in a way that feels authentic to them rather than posture-y for the reader. Unlike the evangelical ‘redemption arc’ of many Inspys (which caused such issue at the Vivians), the faith arc here is more about learning to ascertain and live with God’s will, even when it is painful or runs counter to what the characters want. No characters convert, and there are even – marvel of marvels in Inspy-world! – sympathetic secondary characters of other faiths and denominations! Hooray, especially for a generous and kind Jew!

What keeps My Loving Vigil Keeping from the full A is the discomfort I felt with the ending. Since this is a romance, and it has a sequel, it will not shock you that Owen survives the mine explosion. What bothered me were the specifics of his survival. Not only does it seem to come due to divine intervention (God apparently not being stressed about the other 200 miners?), but also, Owen allows an entire day to pass before making sure Della and his daughter know he is alive. I get that he might have been overwhelmed but… damn, I’d kill him myself.

If you’re like me, you won’t be able to leave these characters in the rubble, and you’ll have to proceed directly to the sequel, One Step Enough. I won’t write a separate review for it, but I found it just as good. It is more of an internal book than an external one, as Della and Owen struggle to process the obliteration of their community and figure out what to do next. Della has to confront the long-repressed loss of her father. Owen wrestles with survivor’s guilt, and his strategy for assuaging it – returning to mining in the field of safety improvements – sets him at odds with his promise to Della that he would not go underground again. Normally, I’d want to smack any hero who does that, but Owen is truly sympathetic.

If you are willing to read a book which does have a romance, but which is more focused on the journey of a heroine through a marvelously vivid and developed setting, then this is the book for you.

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Grade: A-

Sensuality: Kisses

Review Date: 03/10/21

Publication Date: 08/2012

Recent Comments …

  1. excellent book: interesting, funny dialogs, deep understanding of each character, interesting secondary characters, and also sexy.

I'm a history geek and educator, and I've lived in five different countries in North America, Asia, and Europe. In addition to the usual subgenres, I'm partial to YA, Sci-fi/Fantasy, and graphic novels. I love to cook.

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Lisa Fernandes
Lisa Fernandes
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10/05/2021 9:32 pm

Differing POV keeps things interesting! Glad this worked better for you.

Carrie G
Carrie G
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10/03/2021 8:34 am

Thank you for the lovely review. I’m glad this book worked for you. I am a huge fan of Carla Kelly’s older books, but unfortunately I haven’t clicked with her more recent works. I tried this book last year and finally DNF’d it about halfway through. I didn’t feel any connection to the characters and got a little bored with the story. Perhaps I’m not a patient enough reader? :-) While the Mormon backdrop of the story isn’t preachy, the book did solidify my feeling that inspie books just aren’t my cup of tea.

CarolineAAR
CarolineAAR
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Reply to  Carrie G
10/03/2021 9:39 am

I think it’s not a character driven book or even a relationship driven one. I love the immersive everyday setting experience (I think it felt like a Laura Ingalls Wilder book). Whether or not it works for you probably depends on if you like that.

Carrie G
Carrie G
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Reply to  CarolineAAR
10/03/2021 2:14 pm

I hadn’t thought of it that way, but that’s a good point. I enjoyed the Wilder books, but I was reading them for a completely different reason. I read them aloud to my children as part of the literature-based history approach I used for our homeschool. I read mostly mystery and romance now, and have different expectations. Good observation!

Chrisreader
Chrisreader
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Reply to  CarolineAAR
10/03/2021 10:07 pm

Thank you for the review! This is one book of hers that I own but haven’t read yet. I’ve read some of her other books that are considered “inspirational” and enjoyed them very much.

I think that is a great way to sum up some books and exactly why I enjoy ones of that nature. I love books that feel very true to life and immersive. (The exact opposite of the “wallpaper” historicals many of us like to complain about.)

I had decided before this that I was going to go back and re-read some books that I loved in my formative years that I haven’t revisited in a while.

I am so accustomed to reading romance books now with a certain level of….heat, I guess is the word… that I want to try ones without any that hold my attention just on the plot and relationship.

While I read mysteries like that, lately my romance reading is definitely skewed on the hot and heavy side. There’s nothing wrong with that and I enjoy them very much but I feel like a bit of a palate cleanser to keep me from falling into a rut.

There is something about re-reading a Laura Ingalls Wilder book or Anne Of Green Gables or a Jane Austen novel that can feel very fresh after a lot of insta-lust.

Last edited 3 years ago by chrisreader
Lieselotte
Lieselotte
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Reply to  CarolineAAR
10/04/2021 4:36 am

Good point – I never realized that about some Carla Kelly books. Also The Necklace, or her Spanish Brand series. I hesitate to red big meaty immersive books, I just do not feel like the commitment most of the time, like the endless Gabaldon series, but her mix of relatively short book and still immersive, that works for me, most of the time.