Monday, May 22, 2017

True To You (A Bradford Sisters Romance) by Becky Wade

Becky Wade has a new series involving the three Bradford Sisters: Willow, Nora, and Britt.  True to You is the first story in the series and tells the story of Nora, a research librarian who is the typical middle sister who feels plain and unnoticed.  Her life revolves around British literature as well as her favorite classical English drama on television.  When she and Britt  volunteer to be pretend hostages for a training event, she comes face-to-face with a man who is above and beyond any of her fictional fantasies.  John is a former Navy Seal who was adopted as an infant.  He has been diagnosed with an inherited medical condition that causes him to want to search for his birth parents.  Nora is the perfect person to help him.  Yet as a private person, he doesn't want to share his reasons for his search, nor does he understand how someone like Nora can affect his emotions so deeply. She loves history, fictional stories, and tea.  Nora's first love is books and helping others find people.  She loves this new challenge and finds herself falling for John, even though she knows he has a girlfriend.  She has been hurt before and considers herself too ordinary for someone as important as John. 
I love the complexity of the characters in this novel.  Becky Wade has set the stage for all three sisters by giving a glimpse of what's to come in their lives.  I can understand the feelings of both Nora and John, and how they are afraid to share too much of their heart with another person because of not having a traditional home life.  Although not personally familiar with adoption, the insecurities of John who was given up at birth is so believable.  There is the relationship between the sisters that is easy for me to relate to, especially as the middle sister.  And then the author shows how difficult it would be to receive a life changing medical diagnosis, and the struggles John went through dealing with how to accept it.  I can't wait for the next novel in the series and immerse myself in the Bradford Sisters life again!  Thank you Bethany House for providing me with a free copy in exchange for an honest review. 

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

An Uncommon Courtship by Kristi Ann Hunter

Bethany House recently sent me a free copy of Kristi Ann Hunter's new novel, An Uncommon Courtship.  Set in England in 1814, this novel continues the saga of the Hawthorne House.  Lord Trent Hawthorne is the second son, and glad to be free of the responsibility of being the duke that his older brother must fulfill now that their father has passed away.  Both of his sisters married for love, and he wants a love story all his own, when the time is right.  However, Lady Crampton from a neighboring estate has her own plan, to somehow marry off her "in the shadows" second daughter, Adelaide to someone with money and power.  Although her plan to conveniently leave Adelaide trapped all night in an abandoned building with the duke doesn't quite work, Lord Trent is the next best option.  Not knowing it was a trap, Lord Trent investigates an visitor on their property and next thing he knows, he is saying his marriage vows to a woman he doesn't even know. Neither Lord Trent nor Adelaide know how a marriage should be or even what love is.  Adelaide only knows deception from her mother, and Lord Trent has a faint recollection of the beautiful marriage of his parents, but his father is no longer alive to answer his questions of how to truly love his wife.  Thankfully, he has godly married friends that show him the best place to go for answers is the Bible, to see how Christ loved the church as his own body, and as a model for husbands. 
Although I had never read any novels by Kristi Ann Hunter, I discovered I didn't need to because the characters in this novel can stand alone.  However because of the way Hunter developed the characters of the novel, I want to find her first 2 novels and 1 novella to read, to continue the story of the Hawthorne Family.  I love the setting and how the characters interact with each other.  The story of an inconvenient marriage has been done before, but the questions that Hunter has the characters ask and think are so real, and I love how Lord Trent and Adelaide come to learn about a Godly marriage.  Their missteps and confusion when they are first married is so sweet and pure.  I am hoping there is another novel coming to continue the story of Lord Trent's older brother Griffith .  Thank you Bethany House for sending me this story in exchange for a honest review.

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

For The Record by Regina Jennings

I recently received a free copy of For The Record.  As usual, Regina Jennings combines history with romantic adventure.  Set in 1885 in Pine Gap, Missouri, the novel tells of the story of Betsy Huckabee, a 24 year old "spinster" in those days, who helps her uncle with the writing and printing of the town's newspaper as well as helping with her younger cousins at home.  Tired of friends and relatives pushing single men at her in hopes of marrying her off, she concentrates on her writing, which may just be her ticket out of town.  Local crimes start occurring that the sheriff can't control, so Deputy Joel Puckett is sent in from Texas as reinforcement.  Running from rumors that could ruin his reputation as well as his career, Joel is intent on getting to the cause of the crimes that are escalating in Pine Gap, and proving that he is a true lawman.  Betsy finds the actions of Deputy Puckett exciting enough to write about, and if she adds a twist, the readers will never know that the stories are based on Joel's life.  When her first story is published in a far off newspaper, the money is too good to pass up, and so she continues with weekly sequels.  Joel finds that having Betsy along is helpful to his deputy duties.  The townspeople trust her and she knows many of the unknown town's secrets and she can be a buffer to the men that dislike an outsider coming in to try to change their town, even if it is for the better.  Betsy just hopes he will never find out her secrets, or that he is the object of her fantasies.
I found the novel slow at first.  There were a lot of names to remember, and who was related to whom.  However, by the middle, there was more action and interaction between Betsy and Joel, and my interest increased.  I like the history part of the late 1880's in the mid west.  The struggles they went through were real and I liked their communication with each other.  Regina Jennings portrayed their thoughts and feelings well. I would definitely read another historical romance by her.  This was a stand alone novel, although some of her characters were in other stories.  This free copy from Bethany House came with "no strings attached" and these opinions are all my own.

Sunday, September 25, 2016

A Love Transformed by Tracie Peterson

Tracie Peterson brings 1917 history to life in Book 3 of the Sapphire Brides Series A Love Transformed.  World War I has begun in Europe and the Germans are sinking British and American ships along the Atlantic Coast.  Clara is living comfortable in New York City with her husband and children.  It was an arranged marriage and therefore no love between Clara and Adolph, but she is making the best of her situation, even assisting her husband with his business by designing unique jewelry sets with Yoho sapphires only found in mines in Montana.  Clara has fond memories of spending summers at her Aunt Madeline and Uncle Paul's sheep ranch in Montana.  She also met her first love Curtis there, but was forced to leave him because her mother wanted her to marry for wealth.  So when her husband dies, Clara goes back to Montana to live the life she has always wanted. However, Curtis doesn't feel worthy of Clara's love and he is wounded on the outside too.  Clara's mother and brother-in-law will stop at nothing to have her back in New York City for their financial gain. 
This is the first novel in the Sapphire Brides Series I have read, but I truly enjoyed it, so I may need to find the first two in the series.  I love the history that Tracie Peterson writes about.  I didn't know much about the Americans that would spy and aid the Germans.  I have read other series by her, but that was over 15 years ago.  She didn't disappoint!  She also writes more about the spiritual struggles of the main characters than other Christian authors.  Curtis was struggling with forgiveness of himself, and the sins he had committed. The Biblical wisdom from Clara's aunt and uncle reminded me of my grandparents. Peterson outlines the whole plan of salvation for readers too, so it can be a witnessing tool for non-Christian readers.  I would recommend this novel to any reader, especially those interested in World War I history.  Thank you Bethany House Publishers for sending me a free copy to review.

Friday, July 8, 2016

No Way Up by Mary Connealy

Mary Connealy has started a new series of novels called The Cimarron Legacy.  Bethany House Publishers sent me a free copy of Book 1 in exchange for an honest review.  No Way Up takes place in New Mexico Territory in the 1880's.  The ranch patriarch Chance Boden is injured in an avalanche.  Not sure if he will survive, he asks his 3 adult children, Cole, Justin and Sadie, to come to the reading of his will.  He is requiring them to live together on The Cimarron Ranch for one year beginning now, or they will all lose their inheritance.  Justin and Cole are constantly bickering, with Sadie in the middle. Justin has working the ranch alone, while Cole has been managing the gold mines on the other side of their land.  Sadie has been volunteering at an orphanage in town, but now has to give it up to live on the ranch too. Heath Kincaid is the cowhand in charge while Chance is injured and looks forward to having Sadie around more, even though her brothers remind him time and again that he is just a cowhand and not fit to court their sister.  When Heath discovers that the avalanche was no accident, and there is a gunman out on top of Skull Mesa hunting down the Boden's, Heath and Sadie must work together to solve the mystery. This is a novel filled with action and cowboy conversation, with the history of the New Mexico Territory thrown in for good measure. Heath and Sadie are involved with some advanced rock climbing and I like that part.  Heath Kincaid is the younger brother of the characters in the Kincaid Brides series of Mary Connealy, so there is a connection to her other books too.  Connealy always has strong women characters and this novel was no different.  I liked how Sadie shared the gospel with one of her enemies even after all the evil he had done.  The story doesn't end with this one novel either; Connealy still leaves some mysteries to be solved in future novels. 

Sunday, May 15, 2016

Her One and Only by Becky Wade

The Porter Family Series continues with the story of Dru Porter, the former Marine, who is hired to be bodyguard to NFL star Gray Fowler.  Gray has been receiving increasingly threatening letters on a weekly basis.  Gray is used to danger and being on the defensive, and therefore thinks having bodyguards protecting him is unnecessary. Dru's last assignment ended badly and she is out to prove her expert skill and competence as a protective agent.  After all she has three older brothers who have taught her everything she knows and a reputation to uphold.  However, she doesn't count on feelings of attraction and compassion for Gray, who is keeping secrets of his past. The more aloof and detached Dru makes herself, the more competitive Gray becomes to try to win her heart.  It's a game to Gray; he is used to getting whatever woman he wants, thanks to his fame and good looks. Dru is looking for a lasting commitment, the love she sees that her brothers' have for their wives.  Gray has been on his own since high school and never had a family to care about him.  The more time he spends around Dru and her family, he realizes there are couples out there that would sacrifice their life for the one they love.  Yet his past keeps resurfacing and he realizes that he can't move forward and heal from his childhood unless he forgives and walks away from the pleasures of sin.
I love how Becky Wade continued the stories of the other Porter family characters.  I could really see how Dru's life was shaped because of her family.  She knows how a God-centered life should be and won't settle for less.  After Gray has spent time with the Porter family, he realizes how empty his life is without God as the center of it.  He was depending first on his own strength, and then his own wealth and fame to make him happy.  He was living in his past and thought he could not escape from it.  The novel is so real-life and the suspense is just enough to keep you on the edge. The struggles between Dru and Gray is believable and I felt like I was a part of the Porter family.  Thank you Bethany House for providing me a free copy to review.

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Like Never Before (Walker Family Series #2) by Melissa Tagg

Melissa Tagg has done it again; she has brought to life the characters of Amelia and Logan in Maple Valley, Iowa.  Logan Walker is a widowed speechwriter who lives in busy LA with his 3 year old daughter.  He is on track to be a part of the upcoming presidential campaign, the career he has always dreamed of in Washington, DC.  So when Logan inherits the newspaper of his hometown from his mentor, he only wants a quick sale so he can move on with his life.  Amelia Bentley has come to Maple Valley after her broken marriage and has felt at home at the newspaper. The Walker family has made her feel like a part of their family, and she can't let the whole town lose their local newspaper.  Logan finds himself enjoying being back in his hometown again, and knows his daughter needs to be around family, as well as a speech therapist who can help her finally speak after losing her mother.  Logan also needs to find his way back to God, and let Him have control again. Amelia is afraid to chase after her dreams.  She is willing to fight for the town where she feels safe, but not ready to take a chance on love again. 
I loved seeing the family relationships among the Walker siblings and how they came to their Dad, Case Walker for advice. He has been through hard times himself when he lost his wife to cancer, but his example of a positive marriage is just what his four children need to see and his wise counsel is real-life.  The need for Logan to get his priorities straight between his career and his daughter, and the conflict he faces by wanting to spend time with Amelia, but feeling guilty for not always being there with his daughter is what so many single parents especially feel in today's world.  I loved seeing other Maple Valley characters from previous novels in this story too.  I also loved the history that Melissa Tagg weave in about Amelia Earhart and the small town mystery that Amelia Bentley is trying to solve. I can't wait for more stories about the Walker family!