Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Chautauqua Girls #3

Ruth Erskine's Crosses

Rate this book
"Land alive "Ruth shuddered each time her stepmother uttered the uncouth phrase. When a stepmother and sister are suddenly thrust upon Ruth, she resolved to bear it with dignity for her father's sake. But their uncultured ways, lack of taste, and shocking grammar try Ruth's patience sorely. Then, when tragedy strikes her beloved father, it seems as if her cross is too much to bear.

Ruth knows that Jesus promised his children rest, and she assumes that he meant in heaven. But could he have intended it for here? Will he bear her crosses even now?

Heartwarming stories of faith and love by Grace Livingston Hill's aunt--Isabella Alden. Each book is similar in style and tone to Hill's and is set in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

274 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1879

12 people are currently reading
56 people want to read

About the author

Pansy

339 books30 followers
Note: In her lifetime, Isabella Macdonald Alden was usually published under the pseudonym Pansy, and occasionally under the name Mrs. G.R. Alden.

Aunt to Grace Livingston Hill

The sixth of seven children born to Isaac and Myra Spafford Macdonald, of Rochester, New York, Isabella Macdonald received her early education from her father, who home-schooled her, and gave her a nickname - "Pansy" - that she would use for many of her publications. As a girl, she kept a daily journal, critiqued by her father, and she published her first story - The Old Clock - in a village paper when she was ten years old.

Macdonald's education continued at the Oneida Seminary, the Seneca Collegiate Institute, and the Young Ladies Institute, all in New York. It was at the Oneida Seminary that she met her long-time friend (and eventual co-author), Theodosia Toll, who secretly submitted one of Macdonald's manuscripts in a competition, setting in motion a chain of events that would lead to the publication of her first book, Helen Lester, in 1865.

Macdonald also met her future husband, the Rev. Gustavus Rossenberg Alden, at the Oneida Seminary, and the two were married in 1866. Now Isabella Macdonald Alden, the newly-married minister's wife followed her husband as his postings took them around the country, dividing her time between writing, church duties, and raising her son Raymond (born 1873).

A prolific author, who wrote approximately one hundred novels from 1865 to 1929, and co-authored ten more, Alden was also actively involved in the world of children's and religious periodicals, publishing numerous short stories, editing the Sunday Juvenile Pansy from 1874-1894, producing Sunday School lessons for The Westminster Teacher for twenty years, and working on the editorial staff of various other magazines (Trained Motherhood, The Christian Endeavor).

Highly influenced by her Christian beliefs, much of Alden's work was explicitly moral and didactic, and often found its way into Sunday School libraries. It was also immensely popular, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with an estimated 100,000 copies of Alden's books sold, in 1900.

Information taken from:

readseries.com

isabellamacdonaldalden.com

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
35 (40%)
4 stars
24 (27%)
3 stars
20 (22%)
2 stars
6 (6%)
1 star
2 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Majenta.
337 reviews1,244 followers
January 21, 2023
If you like this, try THE QUESTION by Jane Asher.
1,842 reviews24 followers
May 16, 2018
This was actually not one of my favorites among her books. However, the message is painful, but loud and clear and very well written. This is a quote can the book that pretty much sums it up, at least for me. "I think we do, sometimes, put added touches of our own to the cross that the Father lays upon us, making its shade in gloom when He would have tinted it with the sunlight." I totally agree with her, that we sometimes make things harder than they really are. Like I said, it was harder for me to read than others she has written, but what an important truth for all of us!
Profile Image for Julia.
774 reviews26 followers
October 29, 2018
In Ruth's first few months as a Christian, she grew steadily in her faith and character. Then, as alarming changes in her family life came about, and her closest Christian friends moved away, she faltered in her faith and wisdom. Good study on how individuals react to differing personalities that may jar them, and to a variety struggles and pressures. First published in 1879. I listened to this lovely novel as a free download from LibriVox.org. Read beautifully by a very talented reader.
Profile Image for Margarita.
34 reviews2 followers
April 7, 2018
At first I didn't understand or sympathize with the character of Ruth. I wondered if any real person would act that way. But as the book progressed, I began to see a character in my own family as being motivated similarly. I have never understood that family member, and this book helped me understand her choices and reactions better. I really loved the book.
Profile Image for Anete Ābola.
477 reviews12 followers
December 14, 2022
This was the first of Isabellas books for grown ups I had ever read. I tried skimming through an e-book, but I just kept coming back to it, until I read it through. Only somewhere in the middle I understood this is a part of the series. I would have loved it in my teenage years already. Great book for girls!
Profile Image for Laurie Elliot.
358 reviews15 followers
September 27, 2023
There are (too) many Christians like Ruth, but I'd rather read about Flossie!
Profile Image for Martha.
8 reviews2 followers
August 14, 2017
Number 3 in the Chatauqua Girls series by Pansy (Isabella Alden); this follows Ruth as she attempts to accept the fact that she has a stepmother and sister that she's never met. The sister, Susan, is a stronger Christian than Ruth, and is willing to bend to blend into the family. Ruth is the one that doesn't bend very well to the will of her Master, Jesus Christ, and her strong will and over-developed sense of propriety is often her undoing. One big lesson which will follow in Judge Burnham's Daughters (next book) is that like should marry like- A Christian should never be unequally yoked with someone who doesn't believe what you do.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.