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Turning
Point by Laurel Mouritsen
Reviewed
by Jennie Hansen
Driving
to Nauvoo for the dedication of the new Nauvoo Temple? Curious about
how the old Nauvoo with all its heart-tugging history blends with
today's modern culture? Laurel Mouritsen's new book Turning
Point gives a glimpse of this blending of the old and the
new. On tape, the book provides four-and-a-half hours of enjoyable
listening that makes the miles fly by and would be particularly
appropriate for anyone traveling to Nauvoo at this time. It is available
in print as well for those who like to savor a story at greater
length and return easily to favorite passages.
Turning
Point begins with a leisurely cross-country car and bike
tour undertaken by two young women, Anne and Carly, who are celebrating
their graduation from a Colorado university. Anne, who received
a degree in art history, doesn't have a job lined up, though her
friend, Carly, will begin a new job the Monday after they finish
their tour. Carly also has a family eagerly awaiting her return,
while Anne has never enjoyed a close relationship with her family
and has never gotten along well with her mother.
On a narrow,
winding road which follows the Mississippi river between Keokuk,
Iowa, and Nauvoo, Illinois, Anne is hit by a car and nearly loses
her life. She awakens in a hospital in Keokuk with vague memories
of a beautiful dream and a woman who reminds her to be faithful
to her trust. The mysterious woman was kind and gentle. She seemed
to care about Anne, only Anne doesn't know what the woman was talking
about
Carly stays
with Anne for the last week of their vacation, then must leave to
begin her new job. She tries to contact Anne's family, but her parents
are away and she has no idea where her brother might be. The only
person she can reach to tell about Anne's accident is Anne's boyfriend,
Jaden in Colorado, who flies out to see her. She has another visitor,
too, Bridger Caldwell. Bridger was a passenger in the car that struck
Anne. He is an engineering student doing a graduate project involved
in the restoration of Old Nauvoo, a Mormon, and is deeply concerned
about the woman he felt prompted to give a blessing as she lay in
the road near death.
Jaden is jealous
and angry over Bridger's visit. He demands that Anne return to Colorado
with him, but her doctor won't release her to travel and Jaden finally
leaves alone, expecting Anne to follow as soon as her doctor releases
her. But when Anne is released from the hospital, she has a few
days before her flight back home, and curiosity leads her to visit
Nauvoo and see the project Bridger is working on. Bridger arranges
for her to spend the weekend at one of the restored homes with a
group of girls from BYU and she ends up sharing a room with McKell
Hunt from Portland, Oregon.
By the end
of the weekend, Anne is persuaded to extend her stay since she has
no job waiting for her, no close family ties, and she's uncertain
she wants to rush into marriage with Jaden. As her stay in Nauvoo
lengthens, her attachment to the town, to her roommate, and to Bridger
becomes stronger while her dissatisfaction with Jaden's behavior
and controlling demands troubles her more with each contact. She
is intrigued, too, by the flashes of memory of the dream and the
brief illusory glimpses of the woman she remembers from the dream.
Eventually Anne finds a job working in an art supply store that
also handles a small gallery, and she and McKell arrange to stay
on for the remainder of the summer.
As Anne learns
about the historic town, she also learns about the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints. Several encounters with the woman she
first saw in a dream following her accident leads her to learn more
about the people and the place to which her accident brought her.
Something about the temple site seems to draw her, and it becomes
a place where she likes to go to be quiet and think. The woman,
dressed as the women of Historic Nauvoo, seems to want something
of her that is connected to the temple block. Though the woman intrigues
her, Anne isn't certain whether she is real or a product of her
imagination.
The woman from
Anne's dream isn't the only element of mystery; someone seems to
be following her. The same green car seems to be lurking near the
house where she is staying and her friends report seeing it following
her whenever she leaves the house, though it speeds up and disappears
whenever she or her friends try to discover who the driver might
be.
Bridger learns
his boss is involved in some illegal activity and Anne finds herself
in danger as she attempts to help Bridger find the evidence to prove
his suspicions. Jaden returns to Nauvoo at this time, determined
to take Anne back to Colorado with him and to punish Bridger for
luring his girlfriend away from him.
McKell's promise
to her mother to do some family research while in Nauvoo introduces
Anne to the basics of genealogy, and Anne is surprised to discover
she had ancestors who lived in the old river town and that they
were Mormons. She feels as saddened by those ancestors's deaths
before the temple was completed as she would if she had known them
personally.
Sister Mouritsen,
who has a degree in history and has written several novels dealing
with Church history, has a particular fascination with the Nauvoo
period. She uses this knowledge effectively in Turning Point
to introduce bits of history and to provide the reader with a feel
for the dreams and sacrifices that went into building Nauvoo and
especially the temple there. She lets the reader see the similarities
between those who slowly gained a knowledge of the gospel and the
divinity of Jesus Christ in the nineteenth century and the gradual
development of those same concepts in today's twenty-first century
investigator. There is a subtle quality to the way Mouritsen leads
her readers to see the reconstruction of the temple and the work
that will be done there as the culmination of the dreams and sacrifices
of those who lost their lives before the original temple's completion
and brief period of use.
Turning
Point contains an element of mystery, a sweet love story,
and a wealth of information on historical Nauvoo and on the current
restoration. The story is highly enjoyable, but the historical background
is fascinating. The gradual conversion element of the story feels
authentic. Whether choosing to read the book or share the tape while
driving, Turning Point is a thought provoking experience,
one sure to entertain and enlighten.
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