This. I had not heard of it before I started reading it and I am enjoying it so far. |
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I had to think for awhile about the swearing because I didn't quite remember it. Now that I do, I would say it is very mild and there isn't a lot of it. I also didn't think it was gratuitous.
Many moms swear in their head and if they accidentally forget and say it out loud, they think shoot should not have said that out loud. IMO the author was using this to show an added layer that religion is imposing on the main character. She can't just think to herself I need to set a good example for the kids she also has to worry about being sinful. |
I'm the one who posted that and I finished it and I agree with you. I have many questions but none are about the swearing any longer. |
She was a trad wife living in current times, she had a mental break and her husband indulged her fantasy to live in olden times. Her older kids left but the boys lived nearby. She had more kids, the last one of which had Down syndrome (that's what I got anyway). |
Maeve had Down Syndrome? I missed that. |
Thank you. There are still so many unanswered questions but I appreciate your explanation. |
They mentioned that she had her when she was really old and then she noted how her youngest daughter seemed a lot younger than she really was and how she was behind so I made that assumption. |
I'm PP and from AI: Based on a Readers Guide to Yesteryear - Jen Ryland Reviews review of the book Yesteryear by Caro Claire Burke, the character Maeve is described as having developmental disabilities due to a difficult birth, rather than a specific diagnosis of Down syndrome. |
| I haven’t read this book but from reading the posts here, it kind of reminds me of the premise of the movie Antebellum where the female MC is trapped in an alternate reality. Sounds intriguing! |
From my reading, it was a hypoxic brain injury due to a difficult delivery with no medical care. Sort of like Rosemary Kennedy. |
You're right, I was wrong. Natalie's old age is what I was focusing on as more the culprit. |