Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Hannah Fowler

Hannah Fowler
Author: Janice Holt Giles
ISBN: 50780
Pages: 219
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 1

4 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin company Boston
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Hannah Fowler on + 7 more book reviews
This book has much history as this author is excellent at that. The people are strong, weak, lucky, unlucky, etc. and it will turn you around and set you on your head!
sendmeabook avatar reviewed Hannah Fowler on + 4 more book reviews
She was big womanâ"browned by the sun and sturdy. And she was alone. When the man spoke she was startled, more surprised than scared, for she had not heard his approach to the spring in this Kentucky wilderness.

So begins the story of Hannah Moore and Tice Fowler. It is a story of man meets woman, man marries woman, then they fall in love and live happily ever after. Of course, along the way their path is marked by triumphs and hard times.

Tice discovered that Hannah was not truly alone; her father lay injured in a camp nearby. Both of them used all the remedies they knew, slippery elm and fat meat, but could not save Samuel. After burying him in an unmarked grave, Tice took Hannah to Ben Logan's fort, near his own land, where she was welcomed. Single men around the fort were especially glad to meet this new woman. In a short time Hannah, desperate to escape the clutter and clatter of the fort and the attentions of her suitors, asked Tice to marry her and take her to his own place. He did.

Proving a claim, building a house, growing enough to feed themselves and their stock required unending work. But in many ways that came easier to Hannah than adjusting to her new life as Tice's wife. Within the next two years she birthed a lively daughter, Jane, and the family thrived despite hardships like the harsh winter of 1779.

One day while Tice and Jane visited neighbors some miles away Hannah worked contently at her loom. Suddenly something made her turn her head, only to find two Indians standing within the door. She remembered Tice's telling her that the natives respected bravery so she tried not to show her fear; the tactic worked. With the homestead burning behind her Hannah set off with her captors. Thoughts of the child she was carrying strengthened her as they traveled northward to the Ohio River. On the fourth day the younger man left to hunt buffalo, leaving behind the tired Shawnee and Hannah in a rock shelter. She seized her opportunity while the old one slept, killed him and escaped.

Hannah's re-union with Tice and Jane was a joyous one. Although they faced rebuilding their home Hannah's captivity and the strong possibility that she might be killed made both Hannah and Tice realize how much each meant to the other. Together they could face the future and work on providing a good life on their Kentucky farm.
reviewed Hannah Fowler on + 69 more book reviews
Her books are so good you don't want to put them down.