The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn: A Novel
The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn: A Novel book cover

The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn: A Novel

Paperback – April 15, 2014

Price
$12.36
Format
Paperback
Pages
400
Publisher
WaterBrook
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307731494
Dimensions
5.53 x 1.05 x 8.24 inches
Weight
13.2 ounces

Description

Praise for The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn “Reminiscent of the The Last of the Mohicans and equally as stirring, The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn is a rare book that kept me up late into the night. Ms. Benton is an exquisite storyteller whose majestic descriptions, suspenseful plot, and passionate romance are not soon to be forgotten.” —MaryLu Tyndall, author of the Escape to Paradise trilogy “Founded on a fascinating little-known moment in early American history, The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn is one of the most beautiful love stories I’ve ever read. In this tightly paced flight into fear, hope, and mystery, author Lori Benton emerges as the quintessential artist, able to pull her readers into the story through her well-drawn, multidimensional characters, their emotions, motivations, and dreams.” —Sue Harrison, international best-selling author of the Ivory Carver trilogy “Benton has created another masterpiece. With rich historical detail, she brings to life the early frontier with all its beauty and danger. Her descriptions are unique and often breathtaking. She creates realistic dialogue, vibrant characters, and an intriguing plot. Benton has quickly become one of my favorite authors.” —Jody Hedlund, best-selling author of Rebellious Heart “ The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn is a beautifully written novel, rich in historical details that will transport you back to the mountains of North Carolina in the late eighteenth century. The characters are so real and their circumstance so compelling, they jump off the page and into your heart. Readers of historical romance will be captivated, and those who read her debut novel, Burning Sky, will be thrilled with this new story.” —Carrie Turansky, author of The Governess of Highland Hall and The Daughter of Highland Hall “Seldom has a tale swept me away so powerfully that I’m left both breathless and bereft at its end, reluctant to let go. The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn is such a book, a gentle masterpiece destined to be treasured and acclaimed.” —Julie Lessman, award-winning author of the Daughters of Boston and Winds of Change series “With gorgeous prose and characters that will steal your heart, Benton has breathed live and passion into history. The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn is a captivating example of excellence. Flawless!” —Roseanna M. White, author of the Culper Ring series “A breathtaking novel from start to incandescent conclusion. Lori Benton portrays the rugged North Carolina terrain in such vivid detail, readers will feel they’ve followed Tamsen’s journey every pulse-pounding step of the way. A must-read!” —Ann Shorey, author of Love’s Sweet Beginning “In this sweeping colonial saga, author Lori Benton has crafted a powerful tale wherein every element of storytelling is vividly woven together. Poetic, emotional, and rich in historic detail, The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn is a stirring page-turner.” —Joanne Bischof, award-winning author of Be Still My Soul and Though My Heart Is Torn LORI BENTON was raised east of the Appalachian Mountains, surrounded by early American history going back three hundred years. Her novels transport readers to the eighteenth century, where she brings to life the Colonial and early Federal periods of American history. When she isn’t writing, reading, or researching, Lori enjoys exploring and photographing the Oregon wilderness with her husband. She is the author of Burning Sky , recipient of three Christy Awards, The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn , Christy-nominee The Wood’s Edge , and A Flight of Arrows . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Western North CarolinaSeptember 1787To Jesse Bird’s reckoning, any man charged with driving forty head of Overmountain cattle to market best have three things in his possession—a primed rifle, a steady horse, and a heap of staying power. Jesse had the first two, one balanced across his thighs; the other tired, fly bitten, and dusty between them. As for staying power…with miles to go before he’d be shed of those forty beeves, he was making a studied effortto let patience have its perfect work in him.Looking back across their brown and brindled ranks, he spotted Cade and the packhorses rounding a bend in the river trace, where sunlight still speared the hazy air in moted streaks of gold. Riding behind the drove at the mercy of its dust, Cade had a kerchief tied across his mouth and nose, hat pulled low to shield his eyes. Though Jesse hadn’t ridden rear guard since midday, the choke of that same dust gritted histhroat. Grime coated the foot drovers too, spread out through the summerfattened herd, armed with rifles and staves, eyes darting glances at the crowding wooded slopes. Grasshoppers whirred beside the trace, leaping clear of trampling hooves that crackled the weeds. The sun hung to westward, its warmth fading, leaving rivulets of sweat drying on Jesse’s neck, sticking his shirt where the straps of bullet-bag and knapsack crossed. He was thinking they’d reach their next camp a nip ahead of dark, with time to pen the cattle before swimming the dust off his hide, when something with the force of a slung stone clipped his hat brim. Thinking a deer fly had marked him for a meal, he reached for the hat, meaning to swat the pest. The hat was gone clean off his head. It dangled from a nearby tulip poplar, pinned by a feathered arrow.Jesse gave a whoop, then was out of the saddle and ducking behind a clump of rhododendron, putting his horse crosswise between himself and the beeves. From across the river came a spotty rain of arrows, pinging off rocks, thunking into trees along the bank. The drovers ducked behind the cattle on the hill-slope side of the trace, rifles shouldered.Jesse’s mind raced. Was it Creeks or Chickamaugas? Either held an everlasting grudge against the Overmountain settlers. Hang it all, it could be Shawnees. With a wordless prayer that it wasn’t, Jesse aimed his rifle at a tawny flash across the river and fired. Powder smoke plumed out white from the barrel. On the tail edge of the report, he heard Cade’s war whoop. An answering ululation came shrill and defiant from across the water, raising the hairs on Jesse’s arms.The cattle milled and bunched, kicking up a dust blind. One took an arrow in the flank and went down in the middle of the trace, bawling in pain but thwarting the bulk of the herd’s bolting.Rifle shot cracked. Powder smoke hung on both sides of the river now, sharp and sulfurous. For the moment they had the water for a buffer. The attacking warriors wouldn’t risk exposing themselves to cross unless sure of taking them down. Surprise was a weapon spent.A brindled cow broke from the jostling herd. It plunged down the riverbank and crumpled in the shallows, shot through the neck. The front of the herd not blocked by the downed cow pressed up against the hillside and then shifted in Jesse’s direction, threatening to stampede off down the trace. More broke for the river. Busy reloading, Jesse could do little but pray his horse stood its ground.A musket ball ripped through rhody leaves near his head. Back down the trace Cade’s rifle fired. A warrior across the river fell through brush, lay thrashing, and was dragged back into cover. Another such loss and the warriors would likely break and run. If they could hold them off a few more seconds…New voices shattered a lull in the firing. Tremolo cries like the warble of crazed turkey cocks sounded up the slope behind them.Fear jarred through Jesse. Faster than thought, he yanked free his belt ax and whirled to throw it—and almost too late recognized the two Cherokee warriors. He shouted to the drovers to stop them firing on the blueshirted figures leaping down the rocky slope, dodging frightened cattle.The Cherokees took cover on the bank, both with rifles, and commenced to putting them to use.Jesse blazed a grin of welcome at the younger of the two now at his side, rammed patch and ball to powder, and fired across the river. A final arrow sailed over the cattle’s backs. Then stillness fell, with smoke and dust drifting high on the river breeze.The drovers moved among the beeves, soothing them with staves and words, settling their own nerves with rapid glances toward the river. The warriors had melted back into the forest, taking their wounded with them. It had been a hunting party, taking their chances on an unplanned raid. If it had been a tracking party out for scalps, there were far better spots to stage an ambush along their steep and winding route fromxa0 Sycamore Shoals. A second attempt was unlikely. Jesse knew the thinking of suchmen as well as he did his own.After sliding his rifle into its saddle sling, he mounted and wheeled his horse after the few cows that had bolted up the trace. By the time Jesse had them headed back, Cade had sorted the herd and ridden up through their ranks, leading the packhorses. His gaze raked Jesse head to heel, relief deepening the creases beside his eyes. He took in the cow with the arrow in its flank, then the dead one reddening the river shallows, and yanked down his kerchief to show a mouth narrowed in regret. “That dead onelooks like Tate’s.”“’Fraid so,” Jesse said. It was always a risk, pushing beeves down the mountains under the noses of Chickamauga warriors eager to cripple the Watauga settlers who depended on the sale of their stock. Jesse and Cade had hired on for this drove each September since the war with the British ended, tracing the Watauga River east to its mountain headwaters, then down to the Catawba River and the Carolina piedmont. The beeves were bound for the market cow pens, Jesse and Cade for Morganton to barter furs and hides for supplies and then hire on as guides for any settlers heading back Overmountain before snow fell.“We’d have lost more’n cows had these wild turkeys not flushed from hiding.” Jesse nodded at the late arrivals to the fray, both Overhill Cherokees. While the drovers cast half-wary looks at the two, Cade and Jesse slid off their horses to greet them.“Friends of yours, Cade?” asked the white drover, owner of ten head of cattle and the two slaves helping drive them.“Yours too, I’d say.” Cade looped his mare’s reins around a sapling and grasped the arm of the elder Indian, a stocky man with gray threading the hair flowing from under his turban. “Whatever brings you across our path, brothers, you’ve our thanks.”Despite Cade’s half-breed Delaware blood, little distinguished his looks from the men he greeted, save that his black hair was tailed back, not plucked to a scalp-lock, as was the younger Cherokee’s. Cade’s hat brim, pinned with a hawk’s feather, shaded eyes one expected to be as dark as the battered felt but were instead as golden brown as Jesse’s—nothing to remark upon for a man of Jesse’s coloring. In Cade’s tawny face, they often drew a second look.“Thunder-Going-Away,” Cade said, naming the elder Cherokee first, by way of introduction. “And Catches Bears, his son.”The drover gave a wary nod. “Elijah Rhodes.”“Jabez and Billy,” Jesse added, with a nod at Rhodes’s slaves. Billy, fourteen and on his first drive, was shaking in the wake of the attack—with excitement as much from shock, Jesse thought. “Think one them Injuns was Dragging Canoe? Them bad Injuns, I mean,” Billy added with a sidelong look at the Cherokees.“Doubt it.” Jesse grinned at the boy, who’d prattled on about the infamous Chickamauga war chief since starting from Sycamore Shoals.“Dragging Canoe would’ve crossed right over that river and lifted our scalps. Ain’t you heard? He can swim like a fish and fly like a raven.” The boy’s eyes whitened around the rims.Jabez, an old hand at droving, slapped Billy’s back, raising dust. “He pulling yo’ leg, boy. Canoe ain’t no demon-bird. Just a man like me and you.”“Huh,” Billy said, looking unconvinced.Cade was eying Thunder-Going, a question in his eyes. “You’re a long way from Chota.”Thunder-Going raised his chin, nodding back toward the northwest. “Tate Allard said we missed you by three sleeps. We trailed you.”“Not hard to do,” Bears said, nostrils flaring wide, “with the stink these cows leave.”Thunder-Going hid a smile in the lines carved beside his mouth. “We meant to catch you coming back from Morganton, to invite you to a feast. My daughter is to join blankets with a husband.”“White Shell? ’Bout time.” Three pairs of eyes turned to Jesse when he spoke. The Cherokees and even Cade were looking at him as if he ought to say more on the matter. “What?”Bears snorted. “You see? He does not know.”Jesse frowned. “What don’t I know?”“My sister wanted you,” Bears said. “But you had no eyes to see her, so she chose one who does.”“My daughter was not the one for you,” Thunder-Going said and shrugged away what looked to Jesse like mild disappointment. Then the Cherokee inquired of Cade, though he still eyed Jesse, “Is it to be Allard’s girl, who follows this one like a puppy?”Jesse cut in before Cade could answer that. “I have not found the one. I will know when I have, and maybe then I will tell you about it.” They’d fallen into Tsalagi, the Cherokee tongue. Switching to English, he said, “Oughtn’t we to be pushing on?”Rhodes was in agreement. “How far to the next camp?”“Mile or two,” Cade said. “Have to tend the downed cows first.”Bears and his father exchanged a look. Thunder-Going said, “You go on with the herd. We will skin out the dead one. Better the hide than nothing, eh? For a share of the meat, we will bring that along as well. As much as we can carry.”The plan agreed to, Jesse mounted up. Behind him Cade said, “Where’s your hat got to, Jesse?”It still hung from the poplar, neat as on a cabin wall. Cade reached it first. He wrenched out the arrow, his face gone a shade like greened copper. In his eyes a heap of words clamored to be said, but he handed Jesse the hat and went to deal with the wounded cow on the trace. Fingering the hole in the hat’s brim, Jesse watched Cade snap the arrow nearer the wound, leaving enough to grasp. Cade urged the cow to its feet. If the cow made camp, he would take the arrow out there.Thunder-Going descended the bank toward the cow lying dead at the river’s edge. With a wolfish grin, Bears drew the hunting knife from his belt. “If the other cow does not make it, leave it lying. We will see to it as well. Then you can tell Allard and the rest you got every one of their stinking cowhides to market.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Frontier dangers cannot hold a candle to the risks one woman takes by falling in love
  • In an act of brave defiance, Tamsen Littlejohn escapes the life her harsh stepfather has forced upon her. Forsaking security and an arranged marriage, she enlists frontiersman Jesse Bird to guide her to the Watauga settlement in western North Carolina. But shedding her old life doesn’t come without cost. As the two cross a vast mountain wilderness, Tamsen faces hardships that test the limits of her faith and endurance.   Convinced that Tamsen has been kidnapped, wealthy suitor Ambrose Kincaid follows after her, in company with her equally determined stepfather. With trouble in pursuit, Tamsen and Jesse find themselves thrust into the conflict of a divided community of Overmountain settlers. The State of Franklin has been declared, but many remain loyal to North Carolina. With one life left behind and chaos on the horizon, Tamsen struggles to adapt to a life for which she was never prepared. But could this challenging frontier life be what her soul has longed for, what God has been leading her toward? As pursuit draws ever nearer, will her faith see her through the greatest danger of all—loving a man who has risked everything for her?

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(320)
★★★★
25%
(133)
★★★
15%
(80)
★★
7%
(37)
-7%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Her escape becomes a journey of self-discovery and love of a most controversial kind

THE PURSUIT OF TAMSEN LITTLEJOHN is an expansive story of a lovely, spirited woman, prisoner to a life of expectancy until tragedy and secrets lead her to escape. Her escape becomes a journey of self-discovery and love of a most controversial kind. The characters are intriguing; the love story perfect, the journey is epic. Fraught with danger, lies, and conflict, this book draws you ever-forward page after page, wholly satisfying to the end. Well done, Ms. Benton!
1 people found this helpful
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I prefer the author's previous novel "Burning Sky. " ...

I prefer the author's previous novel "Burning Sky." I did not connect with Tamsen as much as I did with Willow from BS. The character and plot did not seem as compelling. Overall, it was still a pleasant read.
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The Action of a Movie Wrapped Up In a Novel!

If you're looking for a novel that is like a movie where it has a fast paced beginning the immediately draws you in, "The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn" by Lori Benton is a book you should consider reading. From the first page, you're almost taken to the starting scene of a movie that is jam packed with action and ready to run. Starting right after her mother's homicide, we are taken to the scene where Tamsen is trying to escape her abusive stepfather's clutch and his promised marriage of her to a wealthy young gentleman that she hardly knows. Searching for anything she finds a stable and a man, who can possibly help her escape, named Jesse.

Jesse, free of any ties to his former life, yet searching for a sense of belonging and some hint of the parents he never knew, agrees to help Tamsen escape in order to protect her. Because he agreed to help, Tamsen's stepfather claims him to not only be the murderer and kidnapper and sets out on an trek, with the man he has promised her to, to bring Tamsen back and make sure that she marries her promised suitor so that he can gain a part of the wealth. Because of the pursuit, Tamsen and Jesse are on the lookout around every corner to make sure her stepfather and clan of people he has enlisted to help him are not nearby. Regardless of their proactiveness, Tamsen still has a few mishaps where she does end up getting into their clutches, but thankfully Jessie and his friends are able to help get her back.

This is a book that will keep you interested from start to finish with unexpected twist and turns and a surprise ending for Jesse and his yearning for a sense of belonging. Lori does a great job at captivating the reader's attention and bringing several aspects in the book into play in a way that is not thought of. This is one of those books that would make a good movie and is safe for all ages of readers.

WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group provided this book to me for free in exchange for this honest review as part of their Blogging for Books program
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Captivating Story

From the first page of this book, I was captured by the story. Lori Benton is an amazing story-teller. Though there were parts in the middle that lagged a bit for me, I still enjoyed this book immensely. Tamsen's struggles and her pursuers, good and bad, made for an interesting plot line. As we move toward the end of the book, the story picks up with action, danger, and a love story that I found completely enjoyable.

Both Tamsen and Jesse face trials of their own, as well as trials together, which brought depth to each character. At the beginning of the story, we meet Tamsen, who is struggling to come to terms with who she is and what she's meant to become. Throughout the book, we see the choices she makes shaping the woman she will become. Jesse, whose story is unique, is an honorable man bent on protecting the woman he loved at first sight. Their romance was slow in coming, but sweet none the less.

There were many deep and exacting truths portrayed throughout the book. The main thought, in my opinion, is well summed up by this quote (don't worry, I took out the parts that give away the plot!): "But in time God will work even the worst things men do to us for our lasting good. Eternal good. Trust in the Almighty, in His love for you, and you'll have no need to dread anything He allows to befall you. For with a test, a trial, He gives an equal measure of grace to bear it and the comfort of His fellowship as He strengthens us. He is acquainted with suffering."

Overall, I really enjoyed this fantastic story and I look forward to reading more by Lori Benton!

**I received a complimentary copy of this book through the Blogging for Books program in exchange for my honest review, which I have given.**
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New Favorite Author

I first fell in love with Lori after her debut novel Burning Sky hit the racks last year. Since then, Burning Sky has won three Christy Awards: one for Best Historical, Best First Novel, and another for Book of the Year.

Critics and fans agree: this lady is something special.

I’m pleased to say The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn lives up to high expectations and doesn’t slack on quality. It follows the lives of Tamsen Littlejohn and Jesse Bird, two people just trying to survive in the wild frontier of the late 1700′s. Eager to escape an unwanted suitor and a harsh stepfather, Tamsen places her life into the hands of rugged frontiersman Jesse Bird. As the two run from pursuit, they may just end up landing in one another’s arms.

As in Burning Sky, once again Benton’s characters leap off the pages with how real they seem. Not a single character is overlooked, and even the secondary characters are given histories that breathe life into them without pulling away from the main plot. Her literary style and descriptions are just beautiful. There is something so unique to her work, something so emotional and real about her characters, that it doesn’t take long to get pulled in.

She also does her research well, and I really enjoyed learning about “The Lost State of Franklin” which follows the short but chaotic attempt of western North Carolina to break apart and form its own separate state. Super interesting stuff!

The only reason I didn’t give this read a full five stars is because it didn’t completely measure up to Burning Sky in my mind. Why is hard to put my finger on. Did I just personally connect more to the characters and plot line of Burning Sky? Was it because The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn was just a little bit too long? I’m not sure, but I will still gladly recommend this book and have mentally categorized Lori Benton into my “Must-Read-Any-and-All-New-Releases” List.

If you’re looking for a new author who’s making noise in the Historical Fiction genre, I highly recommend Lori Benton. You won’t be disappointed.
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Excellent writing

This was my first read of Lori Benton's work and I was thoroughly impressed. Her writing is such that her characters feel real and that you can see and experience the same things her characters do. I think there is a reason why this book is titled the "pursuit" rather than the "flight" of Tamsen Littlejohn. It seems like everyone is after Tamsen: her stepfather wants to silence her, her would-be suitor is enamored with her, and even Jesse would love to marry her (although shows great self-restraint), but it is ultimately God who pursues her and weaves the strands of events together to give her His best. Tamsen evolves throughout the book and becomes a woman who's been tried and tested as true. She finds her match in Jesse Bird, who is really an honorable hero. Because Tamsen is being pursued throughout the whole book, I felt like I was reading a suspense/thriller at times. I was on edge wondering when she would finally be caught. I was afraid to put it down and, at times, afraid to keep reading. But Ms. Benton's writing flows and pulls and just lands on the right words to amaze me. I have to say I loved the character of Jesse Bird the most. I find it interesting that his scenes both start and end the book. In some ways, this was his story also and how what God had for him was more than he had ever dreamed possible. I liked learning about the little known history of the Lost State of Franklin and, even though it was the backdrop to this story, it also had a part in moving the action along. Overall, an excellent read!
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One of the best historical novels!

I LOVED this book! I could hardly put it down and when I was forced to I spent the entire time either thinking about the story or imagining what might happen next.

I am a fan of historical fiction and have been for as long as I can remember, Laura Ingalls Wilder managed to hook me when I was about 5, and I also love history. Too often historical fiction differs so far from what the history books teach that I get a little frustrated. That did NOT happen with The Pursuit Of Tamsen Littlejohn at all, the story is well-written and catches the reader's attention without sacrificing any of the historical details. Lori Benton has done an amazing job weaving history and story in such a way that the reader does not see where one ends and the other begins. It is readily apparent that the author put in a lot of research and that she is a very talented writer.

I really can't say enough about this book. I loved the characters, the story, the history, and definitely the writing style.
Tamsen and Jesse are well developed, as are the secondary characters. I cared about them, what happened to them, and my emotions ran the gamut alongside theirs.
When I finished the book it was hard to say goodbye to them and I found myself wishing this would be a series and I would “see” them again. I will just have to console myself with reading Lori Benton's previous book, Burning Sky, and if it's anything like The Pursuit Of Tamsen Littlejohn I know I will enjoy it.

Lori Benton definitely has a new fan in me and I will be anxiously awaiting each future release.

(I received a free copy of this book from the author. I was not required to give a positive review. All opinions are entirely my own.)
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Intriguing Romance in Post-Revoluationary America

I really enjoyed the gentle romance in this novel. There was a bit of UST, but the relationship between Tamsen and Jesse focused on the emotions rather than the physical aspect. I enjoyed reading how their relationship seemed to blossom into this beautiful thing where they each are willing to sacrifice so much for each other's happiness only to realize that they both just want the same thing, to be together. So kudos to Lori Benton for giving us a romance we can really root for and not have it smothered in the sexy times.

I also really enjoyed the sense of history present throughout the novel. The subject matter is one completely new to me, and I enjoyed learning about the situation with the quasi-state of Franklin and the struggle of these early pioneers west of the Appalachians. When one thinks of the frontier, they automatically jump to the lands west of the Mississippi. But the lands immediately west of the Appalachians in the late 1700's could be just as dangerous and adventurous. I sucked up the history in this book just as much as the romance.

Another aspect I particularly liked was how the author presented this mishmash of cultures and races in this area of America. The area Indian's culture was explored to great ad lush detail. The struggle between them and the whites was starkly revealed. And then the main heroine has a Hispanic and African-American background that throws some wrenches in her future with Jesse and her safety. Seeing all this explored in one novel was extremely fascinating.

Overall, this was a very enjoyable book. The romance was very sweet and the historical setting breathed with life. If you're in the market for a gentle romance in a unique historical setting, look no further. Check this one out.

Note: Book received via GoodReads First Reads program for free in exchange for honest review.
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Beautiful, Engaging Story - A New Favorite

The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn, simply put, is a story that I adored. I have a new favorite author and a new read on the favorite list!

Having not read Lori Benton’s first book, I had no idea what to expect – would the plot be unrealistic, the romance cheesy, the historical details overlooked? No, no and no! We meet Tamsen at a moment that she feels trapped by her future, in a bleak moment when her step-father holds all the control in regards to not only her future, but also the well-being of her mother. When she is forced to escape, a harrowing journey ensues, a journey that brings the help of Jesse Bird, an Overmountain man.

The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn had everything that I look for in romantic historical fiction – the setting and time-period were described so well, the dialogue was genuine and rang true to the characters and setting and the romance was near perfect. It’s not often that I compare a male lead to one of the caliber of a Laura Frantz novel, but Jesse Bird is definitely in that ranking. Thus far, he is my favorite of the year.

I loved Tamsen and Jesse, and especially had a soft spot for Cade, the man that adopted Jesse after his family was killed in during a raid on their farm. There were many layers to the story that added to its depth. Constant was the fear of being caught by Tamsen’s stepfather and her almost-betrothed, and the mystery of Jesse Bird’s heritage and at times, Tamsen’s, provided a puzzle that begged for solving. Top off this high risk situation with some romantic tension, and you've got one exquisite story.

I couldn’t put this book down. It touches on a time period that is often overlooked in historical fiction – a time when America was a wilder, perhaps more majestic place – and to be crafted so well in word and character just solidified my love of the story.

I’m so happy that I already own Burning Sky – you can bet that it is at the top of my summer reading pile!
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A Delicious Balance of Literary Loveliness and Action

The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn is the epitome of what I long for in historical romance - fascinating characters, a fast pace, high tension, intriguing historical details (not overdone), gorgeous and sweeping imagery, engaging and excellent writing, points to ponder, and (of course!) a tender romance. The story is as soft, mysterious, and grand as the cover claims it to be, and I couldn't have been more thrilled with that discovery!

With most historical fiction, there's always the concern that the plot will drag, weighed down by details or less engaging, day-to-day scenes. But Benton's sophomore novel is full of movement, unanswered questions, and suspense to carry the story forward. This led to some late nights for me, as the book contains a delicious balance of literary loveliness and action that guarantees a longer but exciting sojourn on the frontier. And there's enough obvious depth in the first read-through of the story and a perusal of the discussion questions to suggest that subsequent reads could reveal further enchanting elements of the adventure.

I really appreciated the portrayal of the various people groups - from the settlers caught up in the drama of the State of Franklin to the Native Americans as both brutal warriors and beloved friends and family. Each character is complex; each character arc captures the imagination.

My one (very slight) disappointment was that I wished for a little more emphasis on the romance at the end - just another more personal scene to touch on all that the hero and heroine went through together. But not to worry! The romance is a very prominent, surprising, and wonderful part of the story, and I loved it. The hero's patience, devotion, and care completely won me over, and the conclusion of his and Tamsen's story is poignant and hopeful.

Fans of historical romance like Laura Frantz's Courting Morrow Little and Catherine Richmond's Spring for Susannah will adore The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn - a story that delivers in both meat and treat, quality and enjoyment.

*With thanks to WaterBrook Multnomah through Blogging for Books for providing me with an ARC of the book in exchange for my honest opinion.*
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