I enjoyed reading this clean sweet love story. I wish there was more writers that understood that not all that like love stories want to read a detailed sex act.
Lovely story. I wish the writer would not refer to the native americans as childlike, savage and so on. This must be an old book. The story is still good though
Yes hard to hear but it was the times. In some of the books they call African Americans colored or darkie. I strive to overlook it as a sign of the times.
@@cynthiaholland13 Laura ingalls wilder lost her literary awards for calling them 'darkies'. In one book GLH uses the""N" word. Black Lives Matter must not have discovered it yet or they would be screaming about it.
@@cynthiaholland13 Not necessarily derogatory terms. Most if these words were only offensive in certain areas, where there was a lot of racial tensions, whites being Jack-a$$es with their use of them, etc. . Just like the blacks had terms like honkey for them, but also otherwise innocent words like "whitey" could be used as a slur, of course. Childlike and savage are descriptions of things like their attitude. As in, worldly, sophisticated, or highly educated experience for the former and for the latter, "Savage" is vrs. the general idea of civilized among Greco-roman world into the Anglo-Saxon "modern" times of that era. . In the waning years of the uber-refined victorian era among the upper classes, even the un-refined manners of the hosts of the boarding house stood out starkly to those not used to them. By comparison, the natives were definitely savage ! And Grace DOES note, respectfully, much n her books, about the natives lives, abilities and customs which her readers would hopefully admire, appreciate and realize revealed their own civilized-ness, artistry and craftsmanship, dignity and worth, and equality, especially in God's eyes, with anyone, anywhere else ! Grace was raised with a fair amount of consciousness of class and cultural distinction, but you can tell in her books a ways into the 1900s, she was growing more and more happily open to get getting more rid of all class distinction.
Thank you Like Many Waters for reading this book. I thoroughly enjoyed it!
I love this story!
I enjoyed reading this clean sweet love story. I wish there was more writers that understood that not all that like love stories want to read a detailed sex act.
Thank you, LikeManyWaters; this is my kind of story. :)
8:15pm too slow to gain interest
I can do voice overs. Gonna check out the website to get involved
Is this HRH Prince Harry's wife??? Lol
Lovely story. I wish the writer would not refer to the native americans as childlike, savage and so on. This must be an old book. The story is still good though
Hello Indira,
Yes it's an old book. It's written in 1914.
@@audiobookaddiction1229 i understand. Thanks for the upload and reply
Yes hard to hear but it was the times. In some of the books they call African Americans colored or darkie. I strive to overlook it as a sign of the times.
@@cynthiaholland13 Laura ingalls wilder lost her literary awards for calling them 'darkies'. In one book GLH uses the""N" word. Black Lives Matter must not have discovered it yet or they would be screaming about it.
@@cynthiaholland13 Not necessarily derogatory terms. Most if these words were only offensive in certain areas, where there was a lot of racial tensions, whites being Jack-a$$es with their use of them, etc. . Just like the blacks had terms like honkey for them, but also otherwise innocent words like "whitey" could be used as a slur, of course. Childlike and savage are descriptions of things like their attitude. As in, worldly, sophisticated, or highly educated experience for the former and for the latter, "Savage" is vrs. the general idea of civilized among Greco-roman world into the Anglo-Saxon "modern" times of that era. . In the waning years of the uber-refined victorian era among the upper classes, even the un-refined manners of the hosts of the boarding house stood out starkly to those not used to them. By comparison, the natives were definitely savage ! And Grace DOES note, respectfully, much n her books, about the natives lives, abilities and customs which her readers would hopefully admire, appreciate and realize revealed their own civilized-ness, artistry and craftsmanship, dignity and worth, and equality, especially in God's eyes, with anyone, anywhere else ! Grace was raised with a fair amount of consciousness of class and cultural distinction, but you can tell in her books a ways into the 1900s, she was growing more and more happily open to get getting more rid of all class distinction.
Don't care for the AI reading. Too fast and monotone.
Don’t like the reader. Won’t finish listening