Prince in the Wilderness: An Easter Story

Prince in the Wilderness is a work of Christian historical fiction, and it reads like an Easter story told around a fire, with Scripture, family memory, and frontier life all braided together. Set in 1846 Indiana, it follows Laurent Fontaine, a young man standing between boyhood and adulthood, as he moves through the demands of family, faith, wilderness, and first love. Around him, the novel builds a full household world: his mother and father, his younger sisters, the rhythms of trapping and homesteading, and a deep sense that the natural world is not just background but part of the book’s spiritual language.

I enjoyed the book’s warmth. It’s earnest in a way that can feel rare now. The family scenes are where it really comes alive. The joking between Laurent and his sisters, the meals, the storytelling, the small household rituals, all of that gives the novel its pulse. I also liked how much the authors trust the domestic details. Food, chores, baths, tools, prayer, reading aloud, all of it matters. That gives the story weight. The prose is very rich. Still, I never doubted the sincerity behind it. The book knows exactly the kind of world it wants to build, and it commits.

I found the authorial choices interesting too, especially the way faith is not tucked into the corners but placed right at the center. This isn’t a novel that nods vaguely toward belief. It’s openly shaped by Christian conviction, and the wilderness becomes both a physical place and a spiritual testing ground. That worked for me more often than not because the book is at its best when it lets those ideas arise through character and scene rather than explanation. Laurent’s sense of responsibility, his tenderness toward his sisters, and the family’s conversations about protection, obedience, gender, and calling give the story something to wrestle with. I didn’t agree with every idea, but I respected that the book is honest about what it believes and lets those beliefs shape the stakes.

The book reminded me a little of Janette Oke’s work, especially Love Comes Softly, because it shares that same gentle Christian historical fiction tone, where faith, family, and everyday frontier life matter as much as plot. There is also a touch of Laura Ingalls Wilder in the attention to household rhythms and the feel of the natural world, though Prince in the Wilderness is more openly devotional.

I came away feeling that this book will mean the most to readers who enjoy faith-forward historical fiction with a strong family core, a coming-of-age thread, and a frontier setting that feels lived in rather than decorative. People who like their fiction reflective, morally serious, and rooted in Christian themes will probably find a lot to appreciate here. For those who want an intimate, heartfelt Christian historical story with frontier texture and a sincere spiritual center, Prince in the Wilderness has a steady, generous pull.

Pages: 298 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GNT8V9X9

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The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on March 17, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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