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The Waiting Time
 
 

The Waiting Time [Large Print] (Paperback)

by Eugenia Price (Author) "On a chilly Saturday morning, November 27, 1858, as though he had nothing else whatever to do, no plantation calls to make, no office appointments..." (more)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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From Library Journal

Price (Beauty from Ashes, LJ 1/95), the grande dame of Southern romantic fiction, died shortly after completing this work. In her final novel, she tells the story of Abbie Allyn, a Boston socialite who marries an older man and moves to a small coastal Georgia town where her husband has purchased a rice plantation. When Abbie's husband, Eli, dies during a trip to purchase contraband slaves, she suddenly finds herself the owner of 100 slaves and a plantation whose workings she doesn't understand. Aided by Thad Greene, her handsome young overseer, Abbie learns rice culture and develops both a feminist and abolitionist conscience; predictably, she finds love as well. Fans of Price's previous novels will find all the hallmarks of her fiction here: considerable historical research, historical figures walking the streets, and a story imbued with inspirational Christian values. A required purchase wherever Price's novels are popular.
-?Andrea Caron Kempf, Johnson Cty. Community Coll. Lib., Overland Park, Kan.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From Booklist

Price's thirty-ninth (and final--she died recently) book is set, like many of its predecessors, in Georgia's coastal lowlands. This time out, readers will meet transplanted Bostonian Abby Allyn, newly widowed at 31. Although she has lived in the town of Darien for five years, Abby apparently has never before considered what she lives on. It's not until the death of her older husband, whose closed mouth and deep pockets irritated Abby (never mind that some would consider these to be fine traits in a spouse!), that the reality of owning a rice plantation and 100 human beings hits home. A visit to her mother undams a torrent of ladylike abolitionist sentiment, and Abby returns to Darien determined to free her slaves. The heel-cooling period of the title refers both to Abby's need to work out the timing and legalities involved in freeing her slaves as war looms on the horizon, and to the official year of mourning that must pass before she can decently marry her secret beau, the plantation's handsome and voluble overseer. The book is undeniably corny, much of the dialogue reminds one of 10-year-old girls playing dress-up, but not without an innocent charm. June Vigor --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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On a chilly Saturday morning, November 27, 1858, as though he had nothing else whatever to do, no plantation calls to make, no office appointments or house calls, Darien, Georgia's prominent physician Dr. James Holmes settled comfortably into an armchair before a wood fire in the tastefully furnished, but modest parlor of the frame house where Abigail Allyn lived with her husband, Eli Edward. Read the first page
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5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars Often Annoying, Jun 29 2002
By Christine F (Mt. Airy, MD United States) - See all my reviews
"Predictable" might be a good word to summarize this book. "Repetitious" would be another. I thought, if Miss Abby tells one more person how much she wants to talk to somebody, I'll put the book down. Instead I found myself highlighting the instances, at least for a little while. There were many.

In related news, we learn (for the 50th time) that Eli doesn't talk at all, Obediah talks a lot, Laura Mabrey is helpful AND talkative, and Rosa Moon didn't talk before they hugged and became friends, but now she does. Thaddeus offers, within 3 sentences of their introduction, to talk to dear Miss Abby. Hooray!

Characterization is shallow. Plot - well, will she or won't she be able to talk to dear dependable Thad and find happiness? Let's guess.

It's grammatical, but beyond that hard to enjoy.

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3.0 out of 5 stars An Ailing Price, Dec 28 2000
By "lmarmarmar" (Temple Terrace, Florida United States) - See all my reviews
As an avid reader of Eugenia Price novels, I was very excited to read this novel. Unfortunately, I did not think that the Waiting Time held a candle to Price's previous works. I did not feel the strong connection to the characters in this book as I did with the characters in the St. Augustine trilogy or the Savannah quartet. Even at the end of the novel I did not feel that I truly knew the main character, Abby Banes. The story also did not flow as did Price's previous stories. It took too long for problems to be resolved and the love interest for Abby did not capture my heart as did Mark Browning in Savannah or David Fenwick in Maria. One can tell that this book was in fact the last effort of Ms. Price before she passed away in 1996. I will always read anything and eveything written by this brilliant woman, but if I were not such a big fan I would have been even more dissapopinted.
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5.0 out of 5 stars as always the story was great . ms price will be missed ., Nov 14 1998
By A Customer
i have read almost everything she has written and each book has touch my heart. because of ms price i also have fallen love with her island an the people who lived there. this book like all the others is great. i visted the island in sept. its as peaceful as she said.
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Most recent customer reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Not up to her previous standards
As always a good story - one that caught my interest and maintained it throughout 3/4 of the book. Then it seemed to drag on and on with much repetition - becoming a... Read more
Published on Jun 11 1998

4.0 out of 5 stars BUT WHAT HAPPENED THEN???
This was not my favorite Eugenia Price work but as always it kept me reading until the wee hours. It saddens me that we will never know what happened to Abbey,Thad and the slaves... Read more
Published on Jul 28 1997

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