Ohio History Journal

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BOOK REVIEWS

BOOK REVIEWS

 

Long Meadows. By Minnie Hite Moody. (New York, Mac-

millan Co., 1941. 657p. $3.00.)

Genealogy as genealogy makes mighty dry reading to any

but members of the family treated; history may be, but often is

not, written with suppressed excitement, but when both genealogy

and history are molded in the form of fiction by the hand of an

artist, then we get a masterpiece transcending both genealogy and

history. That is the result Mrs. Minnie Hite Moody has achieved

in Long Meadows, which is the story of the Hite (Heydt) family

in America, and the story of America as the Hite family lived and

in part created it.

Baron Joist Heydt fled the Huguenot persecutions of Europe,

married, and with his wife came to the New World in the eight-

eenth century. Here he established a family which was prolific,

and, ever imagining "the Lands further off, . . . still better than

those upon which they are already Settled," the men pushed from

New York to Virginia and westward across the mountains to

Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana, fighting Indians, clearing lands and

taking part in local affairs. The story is brought down to the

close of the Civil War.

If there is a fault in the plan of the story, it is that no one

central character commands the stage throughout. The narrative

covers too long a span for that, resulting in a series of characters

whose lives overlap. One must allow successively the fire of inter-

est to grow cold toward one character, and be kindled into flame

by yet another younger one. The family, therefore, must become

the "hero," in whose fortunes the reader's interest must be sus-

tained.

Mrs. Moody, a member of the Hite family, was born in Ohio,

and now lives in Atlanta, Georgia.

C. L. W.

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