01981cam a2200289 4500
170544249
TxAuBib
20140903120000.0
120710s2012||||||||||||||||||||||||eng|u
9781595549259
1595549250
(OCoLC)759911857
TxAuBib
Richmond, Catherine.
Through rushing water /
Catherine Richmond.
New York :
Thomas Nelson,
2012.
357p.
Sophia Makinoff is certain that 1876 is the year that she'll become the wife of a certain U.S. Congressman, and happily plans her debut into the Capitol city. But when he proposes to her roommate instead, Sophia is stunned. Hoping to flee her heartache and humiliation, she signs up with the Board of Foreign Missions on a whim. With dreams of a romantic posting to the Far East, Sophia is dismayed to find she's being sent to the Ponca Indian Agency in the bleak Dakota Territory. She can't even run away effectively and begins to wonder how on earth she'll be able to guide others as a missionary. But teaching the Ponca children provides her with a joy she has never known--and never expected--and ignites in her a passion for the people she's sent to serve. It's a passion shared by the Agency carpenter, Willoughby Dunn, a man whose integrity and selflessness are unmatched. The Poncas are barely surviving. When U.S. policy decrees that they be uprooted from their land and marched hundreds of miles away in the middle of winter, Sophia and Will wade into rushing waters to fight for their friends, their love, and their destiny.
20140903.
Women missionaries
Fiction.
Ponca Indians
Fiction.
Dakota Territory
Fiction.
Christian fiction.
Historical fiction.
Love stories.
TXTLL