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Reviewed by Alice DiNizo for Readers' Favorite
William Ebhart returns from "Jacob's Cellar" as this story's main character. It is 1869 and he tries to join the U.S.Army at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, through his father's friend and Army superior, Andy Riley. But despite taking his step-father's name of McDaniel, William's father Jake's service with the Confederacy gets William denied Army entrance. So William goes to a local Medicine Show and meets beautiful Nora Lee who sells "her favors". Her actual name is Lenore. Lenore, educated and from a good family fallen upon hard times, likes William and sleeps with him as she knows he won't hurt her. But she totally dislikes his attraction to the James brothers and his special liking for educated, Shakespeare-quoting Frank James. Jesse and Frank James, the Youngers. are all Southern sympathizers who dislike the treatment of native Missourians by Union partisans and they take their revenge by committing notorious robberies. William recognizes that (p.28) the James brothers "believe that they are the young kings of that misty old drama, drawn from their innocence by the depredations of those hated Federal generals. "So William heads home to his family at Jacob's Cellar and marries neighbor Alma Pritchard at Christmas, 1870, siring a son Edwin and then a daughter. But will this quell William's dreams and desire and his friendship with Frank James?
"Time Is the Oven" by Richard Sharp is a spectacular continuation of his novel, "Jacob's Cellar". William Ebhart, Nora Lee, Alma Pritchard, Frank and Jesse "Dingus" James, and the characters of David Fentress, Philomena and William's entire family from "Jacob's Cellar", are wonderfully believable and woven well into this story of the life in those years and decades after the Civil War when feelings of loss still ran high and when typhoid fever and malaria struck down far too many people. Sharp tells a good story, thorough in its recounting, bringing the reader to a well-designed ending. "Time Is the Oven" is a must read for all, but only after reading "Jacob's Cellar."