Reviews!

To any authors/publishers/ tour companies that are looking for the reviews that I signed up for please know this is very hard to do. I will be stopping reviews temporarily. My husband passed away February 1st and my new normal is a bit scary right now and I am unable to concentrate on a book to do justice to the book and authors. I will still do spotlight posts if you wish it is just the reviews at this time. I apologize for this, but it isn't fair to you if I signed up to do a review and haven't been able to because I can't concentrate on any books. Thank you for your understanding during this difficult time. I appreciate all of you. Kathleen Kelly April 2nd 2024

17 March 2016

Forgetting Tabitha by Julie Dewey Review! @hfvbt #ForgettingTabithaBlogTour #HistoricalFiction

02_Forgetting Tabitha

Publication Date: December 29, 2015
Holland Press eBook & Paperback;
280p
Genre: Historical Fiction

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Raised on a farm, Tabitha Salt, the daughter of Irish immigrants, leads a bucolic and sheltered existence. When tragedy strikes the family, Tabitha and her mother are forced to move to the notorious Five Points District in New York City, known for its brothels, gangs, gambling halls, corrupt politicians and thieves. As they struggle to survive in their new living conditions, tragedy strikes again. Young Tabitha resorts to life alone on the streets of New York, dreaming of a happier future. The Sisters of Charity are taking orphans off the streets with promises of a new life. Children are to forget their pasts, their religious beliefs, families and names. They offer Tabitha a choice: stay in Five Points or board the orphan train and go West in search of a new life. The harrowing journey and the decision to leave everything behind launches Tabitha on a path from which she can never return.

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03_Julie DeweyAbout the Author

Julie Dewey is a novelist who resides with her family in Central New York. Her daughter is a singer/songwriter, and her son is a boxer. Her husband is an all-around hard working, fantastic guy with gorgeous blue eyes that had her falling for him the moment they met. In addition to researching and writing she is an avid reader. She is also passionate about jewelry design and gemstones. She loves anything creative, whether it be knitting, stamping, scrapping, decoupaging, working with metal, or decorating. Visit her at www.juliedewey.com to get your reading guide for this book and to read an excerpt from One Thousand Porches, her second novel. You can also find her on Facebook, Twitter, and Goodreads.

My Thoughts


From http://www.thecommunitypaper.com/archive/

During the late 1800's in New York City, it was not unusual to find orphaned children living on the streets. A lot of these children were abandoned for a variety of reasons, parents could not longer take care of them because of alcholism, single mother's unable to feed the child or parents died and leaving the children orphans. A lot of these children were in trouble with the law also. The Sisters of Charity were involved in finding these children homes to be adopted into, thus the Orphan Trains. The Orphan Trains was a welfare program supervised by nuns and they took these abandoned, orphaned children to the midwest to be adopted. Some children were adopted, others were not. All in all during the time that these trains ran, over 200,000 of these children are adopted.

Tabitha Salt, the main character in this novel, Forgetting Tabitha, came to New York with her mother after the death of her father. They tried to keep the farm going but were unable to so they move to one of the worst neighborhoods of the time, Five Points. After her mother dies she is left to roam the streets in the  Five Points and unable to feed herself she is given a choice, either stay in Five Points or get on the train. She is cleaned up and renamed Mary. She is not adopted right away and is on the train for a few runs assisting the nuns with some of the smaller children. On the train she becomes care taker to a little boy, Edmund, and they form a bond and end up being adopted into two families, one for Tabitha and one for Edmund. The families are related, sisters and their husbands.

Time passes for both children and they grow up in a loving and protected environment. A definite step up from the streets of Five Points. The story continues with other characters added, Scotty, another orphan off the streets that Mary befriends and later loves. Gert, a young woman who turns to prostitution to survive until she is beaten and raped so severe that she loses her memory. Gert is taken in by Edmund and his family to recuperate.

The lives of all of these characters intertwine to tell a story of the tough life that  immigrants endured during the late 1800's and how a group of nuns were able to help get the orphaned children to good homes. The Orphan Trains was only part of the story as we read about the torment that some of these people lived with.

I have always been interested in Ireland and it's immigrants, how they were treated when they came to America, having to live in such poverty. Jobs hard to come by, terrible living conditions etc. Forgetting Tabitha, to me was how a woman was able to move on from the past and become a mature compassionate person. This book moved right along and I enjoyed learning abit more about the Orphan Trains.

I received a copy of this book for review and my honest opinion.

Blog Tour Schedule

Thursday, March 10
Review at Eclectic Ramblings of Author Heather Osborne
Monday, March 14
Review at A Chick Who Reads
Thursday, March 17
Review at CelticLady's Reviews
Sunday, March 20
Review at With Her Nose Stuck in a Book
Monday, March 21
Review at The Baking Bookworm
Tuesday, March 29
Review at Beth's Book Nook
Thursday, March 31
Review at Impressions in Ink
Wednesday, April 13
Spotlight at Passages to the Past

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