Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

The Wordsmith: can love be stronger than familial duty?

The Wordsmith is the seventh book in the Emerson Pass Historical series by Tess Thompson. Adelaide “Addie” Barnes didn’t want to fall in love with him. He was too old, too English and too much her sister’s best friend. At least that’s what she tells herself as James West arrives in Emerson Pass to spend the summer with the Barnes family. What was worse, James is set to marry another woman at the end of the summer. Addie had grown into a beautiful and ambitious young woman who dreamed of becoming a published author. James must marry the daughter of one of the richest men to save his family from ruin and his own career. Duty pulls him in one direction; but his heart started to pull him in another. He has fallen in love with Addie and yet he knew he could not have her. Would he be able to walk away from the only woman he loves? And would Addie let him? 

The Wordsmith picks up four years after the end of The Musician. Addie is now a young woman with a heart filled with unrequited love. James was hoping the summer with the Barnes family would be his last great time before he married. Of course, summer is a time of change, of hope and courage. Addie and James’ romance was sweet. I felt for Addie as she was willing and ready to let James walk away because she thought it was what he wanted. I enjoyed watching James come to the realization that he loves Addie and yet doesn’t feel worthy of her. There were twists and turns with a few tears and gasps and a happy resolution that brought a smile to my face. I have thoroughly enjoyed this series and it breaks my heart a bit that there is only one book left. If you enjoy clean, sweet historical fiction, you will enjoy the Emerson Pass Historical series. I highly recommend The Wordsmith

The Wordsmith is available in paperback, eBook and audiobook


Thursday, October 12, 2023

My Paper Heart: one summer and a life changing decisions

My Paper Heart by Magan Vernon is the first book in the My Paper Heart series. Libby Gentry has done everything she was supposed to. Getting into her top choice sorority? Check. Dating a hot guy from the biggest fraternity? Check. However, it all goes wrong when she fails out of college and her parents force her to work for her great aunt in rural Louisiana. The tiny town of Elsbury has nothing for her and she stands out like a sore thumb until she meets Blaine Crabtree, the small town charmer. As the two grow closer, Libby is faced with a seemingly impossible choice. A new opportunity arises in Chicago, she must decide to wait for Blaine or move on. 

I really wanted to like this story. Right off the bat, Libby is unlikable, shallow and vain. She tried to use her past as justification for her current behaviors and I just don’t buy it. And Blaine? Oh Blaine! His introduction in the story is not in the greatest light. And his reputation around town isn’t the greatest either. At one point, someone tells Libby that he is a playboy and will “sleep with any woman under 30.” WHAT?!?!?! By the end of the story, I was over their antics and back and forth that I didn’t care if they had any growth at all. Overall, I did not enjoy this story and I do not recommend My Paper Heart


My Paper Heart is available in paperback, eBook and audiobook


Sunday, January 16, 2022

The Lucky List: one summer can change your life

The Lucky List by Rachael Lippincott is a coming of age story about healing and self-discovery. Emily and her mom were always lucky. Anything they did or touched seemed to bring them good fortunes. Until her mom’s luck ran out. Three years ago, her mom lost her battle with cancer and nothing felt right to Emily again. During the summer before her senior year, things are worse than ever. Emily ruined things with her boyfriend, Matt, and she and her dad have to move from her childhood home. The only person she has to talk to is Blake, a girl she hasn't seen since they were little. When cleaning out her mom’s closet, Emily finds a list. Her mom’s senior year summer bucket list and Blake challenges her to do the list herself. With Blake’s help, Emily sets out to tick off each item and face the fears that have been holding her back. Can she find the lost connection with her mom while moving forward in her life? Does she have the courage to accept the new path her life has taken? 

The Lucky List is a sweet, heartfelt young adult novel about discovery. Discovery about yourself and discovery about loved ones who have gone. It is a story about being yourself regardless of the opinions of others. I enjoyed the main theme of the story of grief. It is obvious that Emily had not worked through her grief and her dad’s determination to seemingly erase her mother’s memory only hurts Emily more. While I have not lost my mother, I understood her grief as reminders of her mother were everywhere in their small-town. It is a fairly easy read with a few plot twists that wasn’t really a surprise, especially if the reader is reading closely. I enjoyed that Emily was learning about her mom as a person rather than just her mom. I enjoyed the aspects of high school drama. I also appreciated that Ms. Lippincott didn’t overplay the drama. It was there as an aspect of the story but it didn’t overwhelm it. Overall, I enjoyed the story and if you enjoy reading young adult novels, I recommend The Lucky List


The Lucky List is available in hardcover, eBook and audiobook. 



Monday, April 1, 2019

The Masquerade: a love story set in the Gilded Age


The Masquerade by Melanie Dobson is a novel in her Legacy of Love series. Set in the Gilded Age, on Mackinac Island, Elena Bissette has the summer ahead of her. A summer of trying to find a husband, if her mother has anything to say about it. After the financial fallout of her father’s business partnership being dissolved, the family is in dire straits and their once high society position has left them scrambling to find their way back up. Every single girl will be eyeing the most eligible bachelor of the summer, Chester “Chase” Darrington, who wants nothing to do with the girls but focus on his own business ventures. Elena and Chase meet, by accident, in an isolated place and neither one tells the other who they really are. Under the night sky of the island, they fall in love, but the real world and their social obligations threatens to bring it all crashing down on them. Will they fight against their true feelings for each other?


I have been a fan of Melanie Dobson’s since I read her book, Catching the Wind, and with each new book I enjoy her stories even more. I enjoy the historical settings with the issues of the time as well as the faith and struggles with God of her characters. The questions the characters have are relatable to questions that many believers have had or will have in their life. While the story formula is familiar, I call it the “Pride and Prejudice” formula, it is a formula that works. I loved reading Chase and Elena fall in love. I screamed with frustration when they missed “meeting” each other at the social events on the island. And cried when the truth revealed themselves and the animosity that ensued. However, I loved the ending and closed the book with satisfaction. I loved each character in this beautiful love story. I highly recommend The Masquerade.

The Masquerade
is available in eBook

Monday, April 21, 2014

"Maine" by J. Courtney Sullivan: a review


“Maine” by J. Courtney Sullivan is the story of the Kelleher women who gather together one summer in Maine. Each woman brings with them past family issues and current family secrets. Each chapter is told from the prospective of one of the Kelleher women: Alice, Kathleen, Maggie and Ann Marie.
            Alice is the matriarch of the Kelleher. She is an old school Irish Catholic with old prejudices and deep secrets of guilt and pain. Alice hides her guilt with alcohol instead of revealing the pain and regret that she carries with her. Her alcohol problem contributes to her inability to loving raise her children. She refuses to take reasonability for her actions which has caused pain for her children. Her husband, Daniel, was the glue that kept the family together and since his death the family seems further and further apart.
            Kathleen is Alice’s oldest daughter who is divorced and a recovering alcoholic. She has deep hatred toward her mother about family incidents. Kathleen has faced her own alcoholic demons and has done well to move on with her life. She is considered the black sheep of the family. The one who got divorced, moved in with her boyfriend and started a worm fertilizer farm in California. Despite being very successful, the family makes fun her new endeavor.
            Maggie is Kathleen’s daughter. A young woman who is writer for a magazine and is working on her first novel. She is pregnant and has yet to tell anyone. She is the typical oldest child of a divorce family. She has learned to be the peacemaker and wants to get to the bottom of every conflict despite the family’s desires to brush it under the rug. She struggles with the realization that she will be raising her child on her own and she drives into the preparation with determination and excitement.
            Ann Marie is Alice’s daughter-in-law, married to Alice’s only son and favorite child, Patrick. Ann Marie is the daughter Alice always wanted. She, too, had secrets of her own and desires that go beyond her husband and the life they now have. She has found success building dollhouses which her husband does not take seriously even when she gets a very big surprise about one of her dollhouses.
            The story begins with Alice cleaning out the beach house in Cape Neddick, Maine. She is remembering how she and her husband had acquired the beach property and built their home there. Each chapter deals with a segment of the woman’s past as a part of the family and away from the family. Slowly, each chapter reveals a bit of the secret that Alice refuses to tell anyone. Although the reader does find out Alice’s deep secret, the characters do not. I can’t reveal too much because it will give away the surprises in the book. As each secret is revealed, the bitterness and guilt of Alice will become clearer.

            I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The characters and their various issues felt real and don’t resolve in a nice little bow. I find myself relating the Maggie because I, too, am the oldest child in a divorced family and I took on many of the roles that Maggie does. I was the peacemaker and tried to make everyone happy so there was peace in our house. I highly recommend “Maine” by J. Courtney Sullivan. It keeps your attention without being overly dramatic and it’s true to real life problems and family issues.