Eden Springs (Made in Michigan Writer Series)
D**R
great read about a large religious colony during the eary 1900's in Southwestern Michigan
GREAT JOB Laura about a place that I grew up about one mile from. Both a great and fantastic story about a religious colony that achieved great successes amid a very dirty secret!
M**M
Five Stars
I kept thinking that this really happened.
M**N
Engrossing From Begining To End
This novella was something I devoured in less than three hours, truly a book that I could not set down until the last page. I picked it up just on the cover alone at the used book store, and knew nothing of what I was reading until finishing. What I began to believe was that the style of the writing kept making me feel it was based partly on true events- turns out I was right.This novella follows a preacher, Benjamin Purnell, and how he first began building his following that eventually became a thriving colony/cult back in the early 1900's. The amount of things that he and his followers dabbled in through the years was astonishing.The novella starts with a scene of a gravedigger whom is to bury a coffin that contains a 68 year old woman, unfortunately the crudely made coffin breaks open and it is not a 68 year old woman that he sees. Deciding to put the lid back on and finishing the burial the story switches to the goings on at the colony/cult .While it does follow only a few main characters, mainly a few young girls and how they saw things. The author is able to develop those characters very well early on in the book. There was no lacking in visualizing all those that had come there to stay and what the place had to look like.The ending did make me gasp, as I was not quite ready for the coffin reveal for the second time. The novella is engrossing from beginning to end.I loved that it was not all about what ended up happening in the end to this colony. It was not totally focused on accusations and media coverage (newspapers). The story had the right balance between what could have happened and what did happen without destroying the original plot.
T**T
Beautifully written, but a bit too short; subject deserves a full-length novel
While Laura Kasischke's novella, EDEN SPRINGS, is without question a beautiful and delicately wrought piece of prose, it was also a bit frustrating for me, i.e. it ended much too quickly and left too much unsaid. I know that "novella" implies brevity, but just the same, I wanted MORE of this story. I think perhaps the problem here is that Kasischke was working from the assumption that her readers already knew something about the colony of Eden Springs near Benton Harbor; that they already knew the story of Benjamin Purnell, the charismatic and apparently lecherous and unscrupulous leader of the religious group that populated this "kingdom." Well, I for one, knew very little about this slight slice of Michigan history. My only previous acquaintance with the Israelite House of David, came from a mostly pictorial piece about its regionally famous baseball team in the MICHIGAN HISTORY magazine a year or two ago. Granted, Kasischke did provide a brief bibliography at the end of her book, but that seemed a poor substitute for what could have been a much richer and more substantial book. Because the character of "King Ben" begs for a bigger stage. And all of those interesting women with which Kasischke peoples her story - what happened to all of them? I wanted to know more about some of those forced brides, the ones who had already been seduced and discarded by Purnell, and then casually assigned husbands for propriety's sake. I felt like poor Oliver Twist, holding out my bowl to Ms. Kasischke, asking, "Please, could I have some more?"Because the details and the phrasing here are simply delicious; there's just not enough. Consider the plural anonymous point of view sprinkled here and there throughout the book - the "we" representing all the girls and young women who have been used and wronged by King Ben. Here's an example -"Benjamin loved girls. To him, we were like fruit. To us, he was like God. He told us if we believed in him we would live forever - not just in spirit but in the flesh. When the end came, we'd have our young bodies back again, exactly as they were. Slim, unfreckled, fragrant. And it seemed more than possible. It seemed likely ..."These delicious "fruits" of Eden Springs: Myrtle Sassman, Elsie Hoover, Cora Moon, Lena McFarlane and others - who were these women? And King Ben, in his spotless white rainment, who laughed and compared himself to Christ Himself - what was the spell he cast over them; whence came his "magic"? I wanted more.While reading the story of Purnell and his followers I couldn't help but remember another similar story from Michigan, that of "King" James Strang, his several wives and the breakaway band of Latter Day Saints who populated Lake Michigan's Beaver Island in the nineteenth century. Is there something about Lake Michigan that attracts these strange religious cults?So much delicious potential here. Something was indeed "rotten" in this turn-of-the-20th-century paradise as the cover so graphically implies. All the elements are here, I suppose. Maybe I'm just being greedy, but ... well, more, please. - Tim Bazzett, author of PINHEAD: A LOVE STORY, and BOOKLOVER, coming in Sept 2010
C**.
Un peu décevant
J'ai moins apprécié ce récit que tous ces romans précédents
S**Y
Parfum de poesie
Loved the poetry in her prose. An intrigue that she spun from months and months of research, and adding the authentic accounts from witnesses makes it more delectible.
J**Y
UN GOUROU UNE SECTE
Toutes les sectes se ressemblent domination admiration pour un gourou escroc manipulateur argent et secte ( exemple Le Temple Solaire Waco la Scientologie etc....)
C**T
A surprising story
An unusual story, a good read. One reservation though: as a fan of Laura Kasischke I felt it was just a bit frustrated.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
3 weeks ago