Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
In 1873, quiet Mary Harrington's husband, drunk and violent, leaves their remote Nebraska homestead. She and her five-year-old child wait for him to return. But three months later, he is still gone. By then they are starving.
They have no choice but to ride out into the frigid Nebraska winter, searching for help.
They stumble into a struggling community of only a handful of people. Mary squats in an abandoned building and begs for work at the Emigrant rooming house. Weeks go by; they have no food but that which Mary can steal from slop buckets and the unguarded rooming house's cellar. A cook's job comes available. Mary can do it, but the law won't allow her to be paid without her husband's approval. So, in exchange for Mary's labor, the rooming house proprietor offers two bowls of food a day.
Barely surviving, Mary and her son continue to hope for Mary's husband to return. Some time later, he passes through, now a drover of longhorns. She approaches him, but he raises his whip at her, and spits, and turns away. She realizes, then, she can rely on no one but herself. Alone, she must find a way to survive, and care for her child. But how?
An anonymous offer comes to buy a claim Mary's husband took out in her name and she learns the unproven land has some value. But an attorney tells her the law will not allow her to sell without her husband's permission, something she has no power to get. She asks the attorney to petition the courts to declare her husband dead.
When that is done, she sells the claim and buys a small house in town where she sets herself up as a dressmaker, a modest but profitable business.
Her health begins to decline just as she finds love from a kind man, someone unlike her husband. Her son grows into a head-strong adolescent, insisting he has learned all he can learn from school and wants to quit. She insists he not only finish, but attend college as well, believing a good education is the only way he won't turn out like his father.
In the short time she has, Mary proves herself an intrepid mother and a woman of courage.
Written in the rich and elegant tone of Willa Cather, "The Seasons of Doubt" describes the hardscrabble life and courage of a prairie mother to survive and raise her child during times that were often unkind to women.