Emma
Heritage Series
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
£0.00 for first 30 days
Buy Now for £11.99
No valid payment method on file.
We are sorry. We are not allowed to sell this product with the selected payment method
-
Narrated by:
-
Deb Teitelbaum
About this listen
It wasn't age or distance that mattered. Love was all that mattered.
With a strong historical foundation, this fiction flows like a traditional fairy tale with both dark and light elements, providing listeners with an early 1900s Texas narrative, sweet romance, and an evil stepmother.
Thirteen years have passed since the death of her mother. The youngest of 18 children, Emma Jackson is now 16, and loves her papa and younger half-sister, but not her stepmother, Matilda.
Jane was the love of Ben Jackson's life, but when he lost her and their 19th baby during childbirth, he became neglectful of the family who still needed him. Evil stepmother personified, Matilda set her villainous plan in motion even before Ben married her. While his children never trusted Matilda—and for good reason—Ben simply succumbed to caring for his family the only way he knew how: without his precious Jane by his side.
In Emma, there are two stories in one, with Emma visiting her older sisters and falling in love with Charley, and with her father finally deciding to rid himself of the malicious woman he never should have married. But did Ben wait too long to set his household to rights? Will Matilda finally strike that final blow and declare her carefully plotted plan a success?
Tension and drama build by presenting the main characters and their backstories. The introduction of tragedy and antagonism leads listeners down that age old path of grief, greed, heartache, and redemption, yet keeping the overall plot rooted in both familial and romantic love. Emma can be likened to Cinderella. However, this story resembles Little House on the Prairie by Laura Ingalls Wilder as well, with the very act of survival in a harsh land during a harsh time providing more than enough turmoil, hardship, and even celebrations. Add a woman who chooses to destroy others to satisfy her avarice, and Emma quickly becomes a modest yet powerful parable and cautionary tale. Based on a true story!
©2022 Susan Diane Black Blackmon (P)2023 Susan Diane Black Blackmon