Read Online All Through the Night By Tara Johnson
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Ebook About With her stammering tongue and quiet ways, Cadence Piper has always struggled to be accepted. After the death of her mother, Cadence sets her heart on becoming a nurse, both to erase the stain her brother has left on the family’s honor and to find long-sought approval in the eyes of her father. When Dorothea Dix turns her away due to her young age and pretty face, Cadence finds another way to serve . . . singing to the soldiers in Judiciary Square Hospital. Only one stubborn doctor stands in her way.Joshua Ivy is an intense man with a compassionate heart for the hurting and downtrodden. The one thing he can’t have is an idealistic woman destroying the plans he’s so carefully laid. When the chaos of war thrusts Cadence into the middle of his clandestine activities, he must decide if the lives at stake, and his own heart, are worth the risk of letting Cadence inside.Everything changes when Joshua and Cadence unearth the workings of a secret society so vile, the course of their lives, and the war, could be altered forever. If they fight an enemy they cannot see, will the One who sees all show them the way in the darkest night?Book All Through the Night Review :
105 Tara Johnson finally returns. I waited over a year for her next book, and she did not disappoint. While All Through the Night didn't strike me as perfect as the first two--and I do have high expectations for this author--I enjoyed it immensely.Cadence Piper is the most relatable heroine Tara Johnson has crafted yet, particularly for the Civil War. With Cadence, Tara did what I love to see in characters. She mixed traits that might seem opposed to each other, but work when put together. For instance, Cadence is an intrepid nurse, but she's also introverted, insecure, and somewhat emotional compared to heroines of her kind. Compassion and concern for others fuels her every action, but she's also humanly selfish, if for solid reasons. She's unconcerned with material or temporal things, yet physically arresting. In other words, I think every female reader can find something in Cadence that resonates with them, and that's rare with all but the best-written fictional characters.By the same token, male readers, and maybe females too, will find a literary friend in Joshua Ivy. Like Cadence, I found him insufferable at first. However, his tendency toward arrogance and self-absorption hides a valiant man whose heart has done some major healing but remains guarded. Again, that's a tough combination for an author to pull off; I've had it happen to me, where my male characters either come off too unyielding, or wimps with no manliness. So, bravo to Tara for getting that right. Also, bravo for placing Joshua in unusual situations and having him respond with aplomb. For instance, I loved the fact that all his kids are adopted and two of them were Black--he did that way before Philip Drummond made it cool, and in my opinion, did a much better job than Drummond.Speaking of unusual plot threads, All Through the Night is filled with them, and they pretty much work throughout. Again, the adoption angle was a favorite of mine because it's not something you read about often for the time period. I enjoyed Tara's probing into Joshua's abolitionist work and why he chose to go about said work the way he did, rather than through conventional means like being an Underground Railroad conductor. The Knights were an interesting, unusual threat, too. I had heard of organizations like them, such as the KKK, but never this one. They were absolutely chilling and provided some good, if not always great, external stakes.Tara didn't skimp on the romance, either. The romantic thread between Joshua and Cadence can be a little thin since the narrative skips weeks or months in between big events. But when it's there, it works great. The scene with the waterfall "honeymoon suite" was my favorite, but I also liked seeing Cadence and Joshua get to know each other, play off each other, and find love after being adversaries, then coworkers, then friends. Again, most authors don't show couples in all three relationships, so I found it refreshing.Finally, I want to say the spiritual threads here were personally uplifting. I got chills when I heard what that quack phrenologist said about Cadence--because a school principal said it, word for word, about me. I have cerebral palsy, and I was tagged with low expectations from the minute I started kindergarten (the principal was elementary). So seeing Cadence go through the same thing broke my heart and made me angry for her. At the same time, what she learned about Jesus' love and approval through that, and through Joshua's love, both touched and convicted me on a deeper level than I usually experience with a fiction book. So, even if you haven't been through what Cadence and I have, I'd say read All Through the Night for that alone.I did struggle with a couple of weak points. The biggest one was Cadence's brother Tate, a former slave trader. That was a great idea, and I did love how he struggled to forgive himself or interact with Black people like little Etta (a little child shall lead, indeed). But Tate doesn't really get a thread or development, and I felt like he should, especially as his father's favored child. He could've had a stronger connection with the Knights, for instance, maybe even turned on them (rather than having Edmund Warwick do that, which is fine, but he was kind of random). I also wanted to know a lot more about how and why Tate repented and became an abolitionist (or did he? That's not 100% clear).At times, I also felt Cadence, Joshua, and other characters were somewhat two-dimensional. Sometimes this happened because of too many secondary characters. I mean, everyone's great, but I'm unsure everyone was needed. As noted, I thought the narrative jumped a little too much in places.Still, All Through the Night is a more-than-solid read, and an unusual one for a Civil War time period. If you're a Civil War buff, you'll want to snap it up. If not, still snap it up. You'll be in for hours of pleasure and maybe some growth, too. 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