The windfall : a novel by Charles Egbert Craddock
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Okay, I’ll admit it—I grabbed this one because of the gorgeous cover and that old-timey title. But oh my goodness, The Windfall is so much more than a period piece. It’s a slow-burn, characters-first novel that had me rooting for grumpy millers and tea-brewing spinsters. Let me break it down like I would for a book club friend.
The Story
So we’re in the Tennessee mountains, somewhere in the late 1800s. Ephraim Grimstead is our main guy—respectable, quiet, runs his grandfather’s mill. One night, a wildfire sneaks over the ridge and makes everybody uneasy. Turns out, Ephraim’s neighbor, Judah Burke, has always had a chip on his shoulder. The two men have been feuding for years, mostly over land boundaries and old rumors. But when Ephraim stumbles on a hidden diary and a candle ledger with strange marks, things get twisty. The diary belongs to a woman named Ellen who once lived in the mountains and vanished, leaving behind hints of a hoard of money. Cue frantic midnight searches, hushed Christmas Eve conversations, and a heartbreaking love story from the past. Craddock weaves chapters that hop from Ephraim’s worries about his sick daughter, Laura, to attorney Samuel Crabb’s slippery deals. Is the stolen money real? Does forgiveness matter more than gold? I won’t spoil it—but the answer sneaks up on you.
Why You Should Read It
I’m a sucker for books where the setting feels like another character. The smoky nights, the creaking mill wheel, the frosty dawn walks—Craddock paints that long mountain quiet, but under it, characters have loud, painful hearts. Ephraim isn’t handsome or clever in that swashbuckling way. He’s a stubborn, sorrowful dad who struggles to say sorry. Judah is loud and bitter, yet aching for connection. That’s what I loved most: these aren’t heroes—they’re people nursing old wounds. The mystery of the windfall isn’t just about cash; it’s about whether people can trust each other again. And O, is there some lovely, wrapped-up-in-rustling-skirts romance? Enough to satisfy a skeptic like me.
Final Verdict
This one’s for you if you love Southern gothic like fixer-upper mountain farms a lot of heart. The Windfall moves at a creek’s pace—it’s no thriller, but its payoff feels earned. Think Barbara Kingsolver’s Prodigal Summer meets a gentle Ron Rash short story. Perfect for fans of Cold Mountain or Gilead. If you enjoy a slow simmer of atmosphere, a dash of a secret, and sorrow hiding under laughter, grab it for a rainy weekend. You’ll come out holding your breath, maybe feeling a little more like forgiving yourself.
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