No Safe Haven is another Christian suspense. Written by a mother/daughter team who have lived the medical condition they wrote about, the story was easy to believe and I embraced the new information that came to me about Kayla's nerve disorder in an enticing, fictional read.
The set up of this book is interesting. Kimberley writes the mother/heroine's point of voice in third person. Kayla writes the daughter/heroine's point of view in first person. Both views are engaging and keep the story moving forward.
No Safe Haven starts with a murder, moves into a airplane crash in the Alaskan mountains, is followed by an attack to kill the survivors, and the attacks continue until the end of the novel.
The descriptions pulled me into the story. The likable characters kept me there. I believed everything — the crash, the avalanche, the snow tunnels, the disease, the AMI program, the character emotions — everything — right up until Jenna accepted the word of a new secret service agent when her body guards weren't present. The ending suspended my disbelief. That didn't make it any less tense in the reading, just less enjoyable in the reflection.
Still recommend this novel for all its positive points and because it is an exciting, intense story.
