I've mentioned before that mail order brides is a very popular subject for romance novels these days. If you're a fan and can't find a story to read, then you're not looking very hard. Surprisingly, many readers don't know that mail order brides are grounded in history and fact.
Men on the Western frontier found their success in many different enterprises but lacked the company of a wife and family. With very few to no women in the remote areas of the West the ways to get those women to them was challenging. The best way was to advertise.
Either a woman would list herself in a catalog and was selected by a man for marriage or a man would do the reverse. The Brides came from well developed areas in the East to marry and were single, widows, divorcees, or runaways.Women agreed to marry men they didn't know to escape their present life, to gain financial security, or to seek adventure.
Enter a groundbreaking idea by Kirsten Osbourne, that became a project, and finally publishing history. 50 Brides, 50 States, 50 Days in a row, the American Mail-Order Brides series tells the stories of 50 women all losing their jobs to a tragedy and how they try to make their way in their new world.
Roberta, manager of a garment factory in Lawrence, Massachusetts, finds a very large discrepancy between the amount of money on hand and the amount her books say she should have on hand. When she calls in the owner to talk to him about it, she knows immediately the discrepancy is caused by him. After the factory burns to the ground a short time later, she feels responsible for the women who are now jobless. Can she find a solution that won't leave all of the women unemployed?
My contribution to this wonderful project is my new release, on December 13, 2015, LAUREL: BRIDE OF ARKANSAS, American Mail-Order Brides, #25.
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When the mill and
her livelihood perish with the fire, she has no other choice but to answer an
ad in the Grooms’ Gazette and become a Mail Order Bride. Will she find peace
and long lasting love in the arms of a stranger?
Griffin Benning
needs a mother for his children. When his wife died, he lost his two children
to his in-laws who claimed to have a better environment for raising his
children. He misses his family and is coerced into advertising in the Grooms’
Gazette for a wife to raise his children and work the farm in order to get them
back.
Will his ad for a
Mail Order Bride provide what he needs? Can he find love and happiness with a
stranger? Can these two
strangers find a common ground to reach their goals along with a
happy-ever-after?
Thanks for visiting and Merry Christmas to you all!
Carra
Excellent post. I have always loved the story about Asa Mercer. And any story about mail order brides, or group brides, or whatever, is wonderful. WESTWARD THE WOMEN? The 1950s movie I still adore. Kirsten Osbourne...well, she is something else, isn't she? I do love her big ideas and the way she can carry them through. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteFinding mail order brides certainly was a big business. I liked Eliza's idea best--more about finding good women than about money as Ezra's plan seemed to be.
ReplyDeleteI want to wish you great success with Bride of Arkansas, Carra. I so enjoyed all these remarkable pictures you posted.