Waiting for Summer's Return: German
Mennonite Immigrants
Reviewed
by Lynda Ochsner
Waiting for Summer’s
Return, a new historical novel by Kim Vogel Sawyer, takes place in
eastern Kansas
among a community
of German Mennonites in 1894. Summer
Steadman is the sole survivor of her family that had traveled from Boston, bound for Oklahoma
but stricken with typhoid near the town of Gaeddert,
Kansas. With her husband and four children buried,
Summer lingers in town but finds no reason to eat, no reason to live. But local resident and widower Peter
Ollenburger needs a tutor for his injured 10-year-old son, Thomas, and
offers
the job to Summer, a “learned woman.”
Throughout the story, the point
of view alternates between
Peter, Summer, and even young Thomas. Gradually
we learn more about Summer; her grief early in
the book is
perhaps a bit overdone, making the story a bit slow and depressing to
get
through at first. But as time and
pleasant experiences work in the character’s heart to heal her, so the
story
itself improves and becomes more uplifting. The
final outcome seems certain (surely Peter and Summer
will get
together) yet the story takes a while to get there.
Along the way the main characters and their
relationships are well-developed and realistic, and as in real life
some things
take time. Summer must first heal from
her grief, and afterwards consider her future. Peter
must consider if he can love another woman as he had
loved his
Elsa.
The story also reflects the
closed-community of German
Mennonites, a people who have fled persecution in other countries and
who now
tend to keep to themselves, not welcoming outsiders.
Here again, the townspeople develop and
mature, from a rather hostile, suspicious mindset at first, until they
gradually open up, a few families at a time, to the newcomer. The author also shows her knowledge of at
least some German language. Peter
Ollenburger, in particular, talks much of the time in German. As a new immigrant might well do, often his
thoughts come out first in his native tongue, after which he translates
as best
he can – and often learns new English words in the process.
Waiting for Summer’s
Return is an enjoyable historical novel, filled with great
characters who
grow and learn from each other. This
story also gives a fresh look at the life of late-19th
century immigrants
and their community, and a glimpse at the history of German Mennonites
in Kansas.
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