In 1881, Jacci Reed is only five years old when a man attempts to kidnap her from the steamboat her mother, Irena, works on. Badly wounded during the confrontation, Irena takes Jacci aboard the Kingston Floating Palace, a showboat tied up beside them. There, Jacci's actor grandfather tends to her mother, and Jacci gets a first taste for the life she will come to lead.
Fifteen years later, Jacci is an actress aboard that same showboat and largely contented with her adopted family of actors, singers, and dancers. Especially Gabe, who has always supported her, and the gruff grandfather she has come to know and love. Jacci's mother has been gone for years, but the memory of the altercation that ultimately took her life - and the cryptic things Jacci has overheard about her past - is always there, lurking in the back of her mind.
When someone on the showboat tries to kill Jacci, it's clear her questions demand answers. But secrets have a way of staying in the shadows...and the answers she craves will not come easily.
Review
I've been a huge fan of this author for a very long time. Ann H. Gabhart is a talented author and delivers unique and heartfelt stories. I've always enjoyed her detailed historical dramas and realistic characters. In the Shadow of the River is an interesting tale full of secrets and drama in a fascinating historical setting. I so enjoyed the colourful cast of characters and the budding romance between innocent Jacci and the gallant Gabe.
The only hiccup I came across was the rather long prelude into Jacci's earlier life. The attempted kidnapping and moving onto the showboat, while only a very brief moment in time, lasted 100 pages and was the source of a lot of information dumping. It slowed down the pace of the story, and I couldn't help but wonder if a more brief prologue or simple chapter would have been sufficient for the purposes of the story. I understand wanting to set the scene and lay some historical groundwork, but I found myself getting impatient to move ahead to the main time period in the story.
Overall, this was still an intriguing historical read. I loved the glimpses into the showboat lifestyle as it was a world I'd never actually heard of before. It reminded me a bit of a circus, full of talented, eccentric performers. In the Shadow of the River delivers a very satisfying conclusion, and I enjoyed my stop at this point in history.
Book has been provided courtesy of Baker Publishing Group and Graf-Martin Communications, Inc.
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