When the Day Comes by Gabrielle Meyer has an intriguing and unique premise for a novel.
Libby Conant is a time crosser. She lives in 1774 Williamsburg with her widowed mother and two sisters. She and her mother took over the printing of the Virginia Gazette after her father died, but they are barely making ends meet. Creditors threaten prison. Then the Conants are awarded the public printing contract from the House of Burgesses. They print Thomas Jefferson's pamphlets as well as public notices. The Revolutionary War is about to break out, and tensions run high between rebels and loyalists.
Libby has loved Henry Montgomery since they were both children. She thinks he has feelings for her as well, but they move in different social circles. Plus he has secrets of his own. Whose side is he really on?
When Libby goes to sleep in Williamsburg, she wakes up as Anna Elisabeth Wells, only daughter to a prominent, wealthy family in 1914 New York. Her father's fortune was self-made, which is not enough for her mother's ambition for rank which values "old money." Her mother has paraded Libby around for two seasons in New York, and now they are going to London to see what the titled male population is like there.
Libby does not want to marry, at least not before her twenty-first birthday. She enjoys working with the suffragette movement, which her mother disdains. Mother Wells is one of the most manipulative women ever and overrides Libby's wishes and protests in her pursuit of the right suitor.
War is looming on this timeline as well, though no one knows it yet. Libby only knows because her mother in 1774 was a time crosser as well who lived in the twenty-first century.
When Libby goes to sleep in New York, she wakes up in Williamsburg again, with no loss of time in either place. Thus has it been since she was born and thus it will be until she turns twenty-one. Then she will have to choose which path she wants to live in permanently. Her body will die in the path she does not choose, but she will retain her memories of that time. If she tries to knowingly alter history in either path, she'll forfeit her life in that path.
Libby is sure which path she will choose. She likes the conveniences of the Gilded Age in 1914, but she's not interested in status and wealth. She's needed in 1774 to help her family and the cause of freedom. And even if her love for Henry can never come to fruition, she wants to be where he is.
But unexpected circumstances may force her into a different choice.
This book came out last year, and I kept seeing it favorably mentioned among bloggers I follow. I still wasn't quite sure I'd be interested, but I decided to give the audiobook a try. And . . . wow. This book was fascinating. The characters are well-drawn. It was fun seeing a few historical figures in the story. The plot kept a good pace, even with the intricacies of two timelines. I loved the eventual emphasis on the need to trust God rather than strive after our own way. I didn't see the ending coming at all, but it was supremely satisfying.
As usual, the audiobook did not contain the author's notes. I was curious about how she got and developed the idea for this book and found an interview with her about it here.
I enjoyed this book so much, I immediately started the sequel, In this Moment. Highly recommended.
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