cover image His Brother’s Bride

His Brother’s Bride

Nancy M. Bell. Books We Love (Ingram, U.S. dist.; Red Tuque, Canadian dist.), $15.95 trade paper (280p) ISBN 978-1-77299-302-8

For the Canada’s Historical Brides series, published to coincide with the 150th anniversary of Canadian confederation, Bell (Arabella’s Secret) competently takes readers to rural Ontario in the years leading up to World War I. Annie Baldwin is the youngest daughter of a large homesteading family from Ireland. She has much in common with her brothers and the orphan boys, George and Peter, who sometimes work on their farm, and little connection with her prim and proper mother and sisters or her father, a preacher and doctor. As the war encroaches on life even in rural Canada, with young men returning missing limbs or seriously shell-shocked, George decides he must enlist. He asks Annie to marry him when he returns. But George does not return, and Annie, now dangerously close to spinsterhood, must decide whether she and Peter can base a life together on their shared grief over George’s death. Plotting is strong enough to sustain interest, and there are good descriptions of the hard slog of farm life. The book is somewhat unpolished and populated with rather unoriginal characters, but (despite the spoiler title) it moves along nicely to its fitting conclusion. (Feb.)