But Elsa’s family isn’t the only one looking for a new life, and California is not what it appears to be. Years later, drought and dust storms launch the American South into the beginnings of what would become the Great Depression, Elsa and her children must seek a new start in California, the “land of milk and honey”. Suddenly she is Elsa Martinelli, farmer’s wife and mother of two, and must find strength overnight. When a chance encounter with a local boy turns her life upside down, Elsa finds herself in a life she never could have dreamed of. Sick with rheumatic fever as a child, and constantly treated as a weakling by her family, Elsa feels resigned to a life of being sheltered, escaping only through books. Strength is not something Elsa Wolcott knows well. The Four Winds certainly fit the usual formula, though the main character exceeded any expectation of a strong lead the matriarch commanding the story made it a spellbinding tale that kept me riveted from beginning to end. Her books are reliably cozy, filled with strong and inspiring characters, complex enough to stay interesting without being so complicated that you have to be fully focused. Kristin Hannah is one of my go-tos when it comes to holiday reading. A trip to another time is perfect for the holidays.
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