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Brief Summary
In A Chosen Few, Carolyn Booth continues her saga of the
Ryan and McBryde families between the rivers in eastern North Carolina
where they face a bleak future brought on by the Great Depression.
When Franklin Roosevelt is elected in 1932, his New Deal programs
hold great promise for young farmers like Len Ryan who has married
Millie McBryde hoping to qualify for Penderlea Homesteads, a farm
city in Pender County developed by Wilmington entrepreneur Hugh
MacRae. Hundreds of applications are received for the small ten-acre
farms. Competition is fierce.
Only the most capable young farmers-those with the greatest potential-will
be chosen to purchase a homestead in this utopian subsistence community
that includes a picture-perfect cottage, outbuildings and livestock
for only sixty dollars a year. When the government assumes control
of the project, MacRae takes a back seat and the project continues
under FDR's Resettlement Administration. Emily McAllister from Onslow
County, a character from the earlier books in the series, emerges
as chairwoman of the Penderlea Homesteads Applications Committee.
Her daughter, Jeanne, who ran off with Emily's fiancé in
Bandeaux Creek, comes home begging forgiveness only to become
involved surreptitiously in the lives of the homesteaders, mainly
Len Ryan.
Other characters who reappear are Maggie Lorena and Tate Ryan,
Will Ryan, and a child who some think is the late Davy McBryde's
boy. Once again, readers will find a story that is both historical
and engaging, with fictional and true-life characters. New in this
book is a genealogy chart to aid in identifying characters in all
three books in the series: Between the Rivers, Bandeaux
Creek, and A Chosen Few.
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