Cover Image: The Patchwork Bride

The Patchwork Bride

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Member Reviews

As June's wedding approaches, she becomes more and more uncertain of her future. Trying to escape, she runs away to her grandparents house, into the arms of her Grandmother Ellen. Ellen tells June the story of Nell, a woman who ran away from the alter three times and the doubts and fears that Nell had.

I found the stories about Nell way more interesting than the present day saga with June. I think the book would have been much better if the author skipped the present day entirely. Despite this, it was well written and engaging. 3 out of 4 stars.

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The Patchwork Bride

A Novel

Sandra Dallas

St. Martin’s Press

Release date June 5, 2018

304 pages, Kindle, Hardcover, Audiobook

Historical Romance, Women’s Lit, Fiction

✭✭✭✭✭

ARC provided by publisher, NetGalley

The cover is simple and lovely. So suitable for this heartwarming story and its many moments that pull at the heartstrings. It tells you that the story is about love, not just once but more than once. And that the love or loves don’t have a smooth path to tread, but that there is a coming together at some point for someone, a mending of the heart. That’s what that simple embroidered heart tells you.

The story is complex and engaging. It’s a story within a story told by a grandmother to her upset, almost-a-bride granddaughter. A story of several loves, of several almost weddings, and of the final mending of hearts, of love.

The characters are so well written that you feel like you know them all. Nell sitting on her porch waiting for Buddy to return, June who’s just called off her wedding, and all the people in her stories like Ellen, Ben, and Emily. Ellen’s argument with Ben was so real, just as two really upset people would fight it out from the heart. And the weird conversation with Emily, the other wife, before the chickens got into the poisoned cake and died. Then the ending when she reveals the rest of the story to June and why it was so important to have a wedding for this bride.

The pace was perfect. The author went with the events and let them set the pace. Falling in love was slower than running out and off to the next place or the breakup fights. Each part had its own sort of tension, but it all built a bit as each story was another canceled wedding, and it really didn’t release until the whole story was shared at the end. Then June’s plans sort of tied things up for a nice ending. It also sets it up for a sequel!

I thoroughly enjoyed this book and will reread it. It’s perfect for a hot summer day or a cool fall weekend or even a snowed-in winter day! This is one of those books that you could read anytime and really enjoy it. I can’t recommend it to homey historical romance readers enough.

Highly recommended.

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I have always been a fan of Sandra Dallas’s books, and The Patchwork Bride didn’t disappoint. The flashbacks to Nell’s stories were engaging, and I loved the parallels to her granddaughter’s situation. Throw in a quilting theme, and I was more than pleased. All in all, a satisfying read.

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Very charming, beautifully written, historical romance, I very much enjoyed it. Thank you publisher and netgalley for this arc in exchange of an honest review.

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Sadly this was a DNF for me. I have read and enjoyed other books by Sandra Dallas but this one was just so slow moving and to be honest I grew bored with the story. I tried several times to finish it but it just wasn't for me.

Since I did not finish the book I will not post a review publicly as this would not be fair to the author, there may be a bang up ending that I didn't get to.

Thanks for the opportunity to review this novel, I'm sure it will find it's audience

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Very much a book of time and place, a lighter, quiet read. Stories within a story as a grandmother tells her granddaughter of times past. Times when women had little choice but to marry, a journey of the heart spanning over fifty years. I have liked this authors books in the past, but this one wasn't as commandeering of my attention as some of her others. Interesting enough not to decide to put it down, but one that did not call to me either. The prose sometimes seemed too simplistic, and the tone seldom varied, with the end result of seeming flat. Although there were highs and lows in the story itself, reading I seldom felt them. So I finished thinking this was just a nice story, but not much else. Still, for a lighter read it served its purpose.

ARC from Netgalley

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I've read most of Sandra Dallas's novels and put the newest one, the Patchwork Bride. to the top of my list. I was instantly immersed in ranch life in the Midwest. Ellen, in her 60's, is worrying about her husband who wants to continue managing his ranch, but seems to be suffering the memory loss associated with dementia or Alzheimer's. She desperately wants to remain on the ranch but is doubtful her ailing heart, and her husband's health will allow it. Ellen is sitting on the porch, working on a wedding quilt and mulling over her problems, when her granddaughter, June, shows up suddenly - fleeing from her upcoming wedding. Ellen calms her by telling her the tales of Nell and the three stalled marriages that took place in Nell's life. Nell lived with her grandparents in Kansas, but took off to New Mexico to work as a cook on a cattle ranch and to find a husband. The story is filled with the language of the times and the area as well as the vocabulary typical to cowboy life...and quilting. Through the stories, Ellen convinces June that things don't always work out as you'd like, but they usually work out as they should. Nell was born at a time when women didn't have many choices, yet she held out for true love and a way of life she yearned for. June is in a situation where she has many choices - Ellen's stories help her figure out which ones work best for June.
This was a great read and left me feeling satisfied, and good about myself and my own choices. I highly recommend The Patchwork Bride to anyone who enjoys a good tale on the front porch with needlework in your lap and a glass of iced tea on the table.

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A very readable historical fiction book. Interesting to read about what women from that time period thought, felt, and did.

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Thank you to St. Martin's Press for the free review copy of this novel. All opinions are my own.
Right away, I was drawn into this book by the wonderful descriptions Dallas gives of the people and place. I wanted to know what was going on with Ben, Ellen, and June.
The grandma/granddaughter relationship in this novel was so fantastic. I thought about my grandma the whole time and about the stories that she tells. Ellen doesn't tell June what to do, she lets her think through the decisions by telling the stories of Nell running away from three different men. I really loved how when Nell's story was being told, the reader was completely immersed in that place, but still knew that she was going to run. I think that knowing that information, in this case, helped add suspense to see how Nell ended up later in life. I loved that Nell was a strong woman.
I did figure out one of the surprises, but that didn't take away from the novel. The only complaint I have is that the last big surprise, which I didn't figure out, was a little harder to put into the plot. If you read it, you may understand what I mean.
This is a historical fiction novel that shows how everything will work out how it's supposed to.

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The Patchwork Bride
Sandra Dallas
Dallas’s latest is a step back in time, a touching tale about love, loss and second chances. The novel is suitably paced moving adroitly between the mid twentieth and late nineteenth centuries with vivid depictions that will invite the reader right into the tale and period perfect dialogue that will have them googling terms from a bygone era. The characters are intriguing and real especially Ellen and the twists and turns lead to some secrets being outed and a big reveal at the end. This heartwarming piece of historical fiction will appeal to Dallas’s fans and fans of this genre.
SYNOPSIS:
Ellen and Ben have lived a good life and raised their family on their Colorado cattle ranch. And even though Ben’s memory is slipping and her heart isn’t so good anymore and even though the doctor thinks they should move to town Ellen is determined to keep them on the ranch as long as possible. But now she’s got another problem. Right in the middle of making her youngest granddaughter, June’s wedding quilt June shows up unexpectedly at the ranch and confesses to her grandmother that she’s come to the ranch to hide out after calling off her wedding not wanting to face her mother or her fiancé. Ellen understands more than June can possibly understand and tells her about a woman named Nell who fifty years ago ran away three times from three different men and three different weddings.

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Classic Sandra Dallas...an enjoyable, light, easy read. Pick it up and treat yourself for an afternoon.

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I've had to wait impatiently for over two years for Sandra Dallas to write another book. I look forward to hers every year. This one is classic Sandra Dallas. A grandmother tells her granddaughter a story of a woman who ran from marriage three times. It's not too difficult to discern who the story is really about, but the ending has a pleasant twist. Dallas weaves a wonderful story, replete with rich fabrics and details.

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The good: each story was tied to a location in a way that was entertaining and (at least from my side) believable. Each episode felt well-grounded in time and place, and I particularly enjoyed reading about northern New Mexico.

The rest: I really did not enjoy this book. The writing style was overly simplistic - telling and telling and never showing - and the plot ranged from boring to implausible to downright baffling at times. I caught on early to several of the big reveals but the biggest of them all just came out of nowhere for me and added very little to the story.

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I love Sandra Dallas and was not disappointed with her new book.
A very touching,sweet Historical Romance, it is very well written,
has an interesting plot and endearing characters.
Fans of Sandra Dallas will not be disappointed!

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Fans of Sandra Dallas will find comfort in the characters and settings of this book. It has a strong main character, Nell who at times, reminded me of Mattie Spencer from The Diary of Mattie Spencer (one of my favorite Dallas books).

I would like to thank NetGalley for a copy of this book.

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June is visiting her grandparents, Ellen and Ben. June has just run away from her fiancé, knowing that she was not ready to marry him. Ellen begins to tell June the story of a young woman and the three “runaway”engagements that she had in her lifetime. The first story begins in 1898 on a ranch in the New Mexico Territory of the U. S. This historical romance is a beautiful love story that is absolutely delightful and heartwarming. I was as eager as June, wanting to hear every detail of each story until the surprising ending. A big four and a half stars to to sweet tale of love and self-discovery!

The Patchwork Bride by Sandra Dallas will be available June 5, 2018 from St. Martin's Press. An egalley of this book was made available from the publisher in exchange for a honest review.

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The Patchwork Bride is an awesome read! Probably one of my favorites I have read by this author. 5 plus stars.

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Writing: 3 Plot: 3 Characters: 3

Sweet story about looking for love and marriage in the West between 1900 and 1952. Ellen and her husband of 50 years, Ben, are struggling with her heart condition and his failing memory while they try to hold on to the ranch they both love. When Ellen’s granddaughter June arrives suddenly after a hastily canceled wedding, Ellen tells her instructive stories of a friend who ran from three weddings. The patchwork bride refers both to the quilts Ellen makes for friends and family on their marriages, and for the patchwork of reluctant brides in the story.

Dallas is in her element when she describes the historically detailed Western environment (spanning a Kansas farm, a New Mexican ranch, Denver, and Kansas City) and the bonds and characters of a strong, lengthy marriage. I found the three runaway bride vignettes to contain stuffier, less natural, characters and a rushed feel (the back stories tended to come out in a 2 page rush delivered by a single person in a confessional style). Still, an easy, pleasant read.

Good for fans of historical fiction.

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I requested this book because I have read several of Sandra Dallas's books before and have really enjoyed them. I really liked the idea of this book, but it personally wasn't my taste in reading. However, I would definitely recommend this book to anyone looking for a good romántic book.

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When I saw that Sandra Dallas had a new book, I was beyond excited!!
I have read all of her fiction books ( I am now on a mission to read all of her non-fiction books.
I have truly loved all of her books!

Story opens to grandmother searching in the attic through trunks to find an antique wedding dress --
I became interested and read the entire book.

Grandmother quilting a patchwork quilt, a young woman having cold feet before her wedding.
She runs away to grandparent's house for security and space.
Grandmother shares stories of 3 other brides-to-be.

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