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Digital download. PDF available upon purchase.

 

Summary

Waldwick is a love story that addresses the subject of physical, social, economic, and political oppression of the 1800s. Set in Cornwall, England, Virginia, and Southwestern Wisconsin, Waldwick frankly discusses what one family was willing to do to overcome oppression, as told through the eyes of George Terrill as he fights for his own freedom and then that of slaves owned by his brother. 

 

Set before and during the Civil War, Waldwick summarizes what happens when oppression is removed and Daniel, an enslaved man, is given the opportunity to be free. The author weaves actual events and historical figures into the story and describes how the main characters are affected by these circumstances and interactions. Imagine the horror of having loved ones on both sides of a great battle and not knowing their fate. 

 

In our time, when our society and culture are so divided, Waldwick offers a look beneath skin color at the majesty of respect and the integrity of acceptance without downplaying reality. Addressing many of the salient issues facing the world today, Waldwick focuses on emotions to the point that readers become immersed in the love, hate, anger, frustration, jealousy, and sorrow of the characters they really learn to know.

 

In-Depth Summary

A searing and evocative work of historical fiction, this novel unfolds across the starkly contrasting landscapes of Cornwall, England, Virginia, and the rolling hills of southwestern Wisconsin between 1826 and 1871. Linde's masterfully rendered narrative integrates real historical figures and events into a richly imagined fictional arc, chronicling one man’s odyssey through suffering, moral reckoning, and eventual reparation.

 

At its center is George Terrill, a twenty-two-year-old descendant of French gentry, raised amid the soot and labor of mining life. Accompanied by his young wife and the widowed mother and infant son of his late childhood friend, Terrill embarks for America with little more than the spectral hope of freedom. What follows is a generational saga that bears witness to the full weight of human endurance—through oppression, despair, resurgence, and the redemptive, if brutal, pursuit of justice.

 

Linde’s narrative is the result of meticulous historical inquiry, offering unflinching portrayals of indigenous displacement and the systemic atrocities inflicted upon enslaved Black communities. While the Terrill family endures profound personal tragedy, it is through the lives of secondary characters—particularly Native and African American individuals—that the novel lays bare the relentless violence and unbreakable spirit of those marginalized by history. Their resilience, portrayed with both tenderness and gravity, forms the novel’s emotional and ethical core.

 

This is not a work for the faint of heart: the novel includes graphic depictions of sexual violence, abuse—including against minors—and scenes of intense brutality. Yet these harrowing elements are handled with narrative integrity, illuminating rather than exploiting the dark contours of the past.

 

Central to the novel is the theme of moral ambiguity, explored through George’s own rationalization of his involvement in a grievous death. Linde’s treatment of this internal conflict is both nuanced and exacting, inviting readers to interrogate the justifications that often accompany acts of historical violence.

 

At once a meditation on liberty and subjugation, and a testament to love, kinship, and human perseverance, this is historical fiction at its most profound and unrelenting best. A vital read for those who seek not only to be transported by story, but also confronted by the deeper truths history demands we remember.

Waldwick (PDF)

$9.99Price
  • Release Date: October 2018

    Author: Kenneth Linde

    Publisher: Waldwick Books 

    Format: PDF

    ISBN: 979-8-9905142-0-1

    Price: $9.99

    Page Count (print book): 322

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