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Author Archive for Gloria – Page 3

Submerged by Dani Pettrey

Monday, July 15th, 2013

Submerged by Dani Pettrey is romantic suspense from Bethany House. The story starts with an adrenaline rush that sets up the story perfectly.

Dani’s main characters, Bailey Craig and Cole McKenna develop some good chemistry once Bailey is back in Yancey, Alaska after a ten year hiatus from her home town. Whereas in the last book I reviewed, Her Good Name, Espy hadn’t deserved what happened to her, it appears that Bailey has done the deeds of which she is accused. Still, even if the rest of the town won’t forget, Cole believes people can change and he sees changes in Bailey.

What I liked about this book was the fun dynamic in the McKenna family. That in itself will encourage me to buy more Alaskan Courage books. The writing was clean and the story well-paced. I particularly liked the backstory to the plot. I always love when history plays into a story and makes me believe the fiction could be real. The whole Romanov Dynasty thread kept me just as hooked as figuring out the mystery of who the bad guy would turn out to be.

I was knocked out of my suspension of disbelief on one tiny plot issue near the end, but since it was needed for the wham-bam ending, I forgive the author for pushing through and asking her characters to allow something I found hard to believe they would have allowed to happen.  Of course I can’t be more specific without ruining the ending for you and I do believe this one you should read.

This story also had a solid spiritual theme of being new in Christ, accepting Christ’s blood for the forgiveness of our sins, and walking in the victory Christ has provided for us. I look forward to seeing Bailey and Cole in a solid relationship in future books about the McKenna clan.

Her Good Name by Ruth Axtell

Monday, July 15th, 2013

Historical romance from Moody Publishers, Her Good Name opens in Holliston, Maine, 1892. Espy Estrada is excited at the opportunity to improve her lot in life.  Having worked in the cannery since her father’s injury, Espy hadn’t been able to finish high school as she helps her mother care for her ten younger brothers and sisters, but now she has an opportunity to become a ladies maid for one of the city’s upstanding citizens. Her love interest, Warren Brentwood, is back from school and learning how to run his father’s mill. From the get-go, we see the class differences will be an issue – for everyone except Espy who loves easily and sees potential in every situation.

This book is filled with interesting secondary characters from Espy’s siblings, to Espy’s employers, Warren’s family, and their joint friends. I liked the idea of the church group of youth looking beyond themselves and getting involved in the community. I particularly liked how Espy’s personality held it all together and spearheaded their few successes.

As the plot advances, the title of the book begins to have serious play in the developing action and my heart ached for Espy as she lost her good name. But Espy isn’t one to stay down forever, and she moves from Holliston to find the better life she’s always believed possible. Still, it is only when she finds a true relationship with her Creator, that Espy finds the peace and purpose she has always dreamed of. Both characters have some wonderful spiritual growth to reach before they can find their happily-ever-after together.

This is the first Ruth Axtell book I’ve read. It may well be her debut novel.  I found the writing clean and the story easy to follow.  Because of Espy’s wonderful personality I rooted for her the entire way.  I felt the unfairness of her situation as if I had been the one maligned. I cheered when Warren started making good decisions. I recommend this story for all historical romance readers who want a memorable character – Espy Estrada.

Queen of the Waves by Janice Thompson

Wednesday, July 3rd, 2013

Queen of the Waves by Janice Thompson is historical romance from Summerside Press. Set in 1912, starting a month before the voyage of the Titanic, Queen of the Waves focuses on the lives of two women, Tessa Bowen, daughter of a pig farmer, and Jacquie Abingdon, daughter of an English businessman.

The gist of the story is that Jacquie's father was promised her to be married to a boring American business man for financial reasons, but Jacquie is in love with the gardner, Peter, who happens to be Tessa's brother.  Jacquie's mom doesn't want to her to meet the same fate of a loveless marriage that she has endured so she concocts a plan to send Jacquie to her grandmother in New York, via the Titanic in one month's time.  Not wanting to leave Peter she asks him to run away with her.  Instead, he suggests they send his sister in Jacquie's place.

Jacquie's a wee bit foolish and oblivious, never wondering how sending another girl in her place helps her plans to run away with Peter. And Peter really isn't about running away so much as he is about getting his sister out of her horrible situation on the pig farm.

But none of that matters once Tessa is on board the Titanic and meets Nathan Patterson, an American on his own way home to begin his new life with his father's insurance firm.

Janice Thompson does a great job with the descriptions of the Titanic and the first class people aboard. She sets a great stage of mixed nationalities and purposes and appearances for four fabulous days of sailing. If a person didn't know the ending, she would enjoy the ride.

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Categories : What I've Read

Love Finds You in Wildrose, North Dakota by Tracey Bateman

Monday, February 4th, 2013

Love Finds You in Wildrose, North Dakota by Tracey Bateman is an historical romance set in 1895. Tracey Bateman is a fine writer and her stories are always fun. But I listened to this story on my Kindle during a seven hour drive away from my home and two days later, back again … and though the Kindle is quite clear in a quiet house, I couldn't get it loud enough to ear with road noise. So picture me with the Kindle tucked under the seatbelt and my chin, listening as I drive down the road.

Also remember the Kindle doesn't read like an audio book, so I needed to listen closely to overcome the voice not stopping at periods feature. Imagine hearing this without pause: "whether he knew it or not Finn needed her too chapter seven Rosemary awoke to cold, wet droplets falling on her face."

Okay, all that was just to share a new experience.  Back to the book review.

Rosemary Jackson travels to North Dakota to stay with her twin sister and her sister's husband, after Rosemary's father has died and her Kansas homestead has been sold. Winter weather keeps her with neighbors where she finds out her sister is expecting a baby. Unfortunately, when Rosemary arrives at her sister's soddy no one is there and she finds a grave. Her sister has died.

The baby has lived, but isn't thriving, and Finn, Rosemary's brother-in-law, is barely functioning. The obvious thing to do would be to marry Rosemary so that she can care for the child while he gets back to farming, but Finn loved Rachel and is still grieving too deeply to consider the proposal.

I liked Rosemary's take-charge personality, how she wasn't bullied by tradition, men's chauvanisms, or an outright cattle ranching bully who wanted to scarf up all the settlers' claims. I liked how Finn had to work through his grief and how the tables turned on him and he become the one who wanted to marry. I liked the plot twist around the sheriff. I liked the historical facts fed through the story.

I wouldn't say this was an unforgettable Bateman book, but it was a straightforward, enjoyable Christian romance. If you like the Love Find You books, you will definitely like this one.

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The Merchant’s Daughter by Melanie Dickerson

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2013

The Merchant's Daughter is Young Adult fiction from Zondervan. Playing on the fairy tale Beauty and the Beast, Melanie Dickerson sets her story in 1352 England. The Merchant's Daughter explores the feudal system in medieval times.

Annabel was once the daughter of a rich merchant who loved her and educated her and paid her tax so she didn't have work in her lord's fields. Now, Annabel is a half-orphan with a mom who is in denial, a brother who is feeble, and a brother who is too proud to work. Their tax hasn't been paid for three years, and one of the kids has to be a servant to the new lord to pay off the tax.

Ranulf le Wyse, disfigured from an encounter with a wolf (no, he's not a werewolf, nor does he have any of those characteristics!), and disgruntled by his wife's response to his disfigurement, decides to build a new life in Glynval. Alone after the plague has taken the rest of his family, Ranulf is a bit of a grumpy, old man at age 25.

I like the sweet love story in this book.  I like Annabel's innocence and desire to read God's Word and become a nun.  I like how Ranulf's heroic nature comes out again and again even while he tries to be distant and grumpy. I like that the bad guy is bad, but bad in a normal, not a creepy, give me nightmares, way. And I like that the secondary characters all have good and not so beautiful qualities about them.

This is my second Dickerson YA and I enjoy her style and stories. I look forward to reading Fairest Beauty for book club in a couple months. If you like the chivalry of the medieval era, the pleasure of young love, and a plot that you can simply enjoy without fear, you should try Melanie Dickerson fiction.

 

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Passage to November by Phyllis DeMarco

Friday, January 18th, 2013

Passage to November is historical romance from the Wild Rose Press set on the Great Lakes in 1913. It was a fun setting and time period that I don't remember reading before.

Clara Grace is a young woman on her own, just wanting a break in the music industry. She thinks she has a job with the orchestra on the Eastland but that opportunity is lost and replaced with cook on a cargo ship, Longhope.

Captain William McTavish is a crusty Scottish bachelor with a ship full of … well … sailors. The men are rough and not excited to have a woman along for the summer.

The story has some intrique as well as sailors that won't come around to seeing Clara's good qualities and worth to the crew, which leads to trouble by November.

But in the mean time, the romance that develops between McTavish and Clara is presented in such a way that I believe it. These two characters will make it through December if you remember the old Merl Haggard song and live well together. The short time in the story where they actually embrace their feelings are flirtatious and charming.

As a caveat for Christian readers, the sailors speak like sailors.  And though the Christian flavor is light and mingled with some fun superstition, it is definitely a book written from a Christian world view with characters who understand who holds their future.

I liked this book, these characters, the setting, the violin and Clara's creativity in composing a symphony, the ship and crew and ports, even the backstory, and how it all tied together. Passage to November by Phyllis DeMarco is a well-put together book and an enjoyable read.

 

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Sandwich With a Side of Romance by Krista Phillips

Wednesday, December 26th, 2012

Fiction. Christian. Romance. With a side of chick lit for snarky attitude of the heroine. Except she wasn't too snarky. I liked her. And she certainly wasn't my favorite "too good to be true" type heroine. Maddie Buckner has a past filled with not-so-good choices.

But she made a great one just months before the book begins — let Jesus be Lord of her life.

The gist of this romance is that our hero, Reuben, causes Maddie to get fired on the first day of her "new life" in Sandwich. She insists he make it right. He does so by hiring her himself — which eventually leads to a suitable job as his assistant.  Reuben is in need of organizational help at his restaurant, so it's win-win.

Except that Reuben has a steady girlfriend.

And Maddie and Reuben kind of fall in love even while trying not to.

Sandwich with a Side of Romance is cute and funny and walks deeper with Jesus as the story progresses. The theme of being willing to accept help as well as give it is seen in the lives of both the main characters, and through the secondary characters of Reuben's girlfriend and Maddie's brother. Plus, I love it when a book ties aspects together — like Reuben's name, his profession as a restauranteur, and the town's name of Sandwich.

Maddie's personality is delightful. Though she's had a tough life, she's not one to cry, "Woe is me!" and expect help.  I think her great work ethic is part of what makes her so likeable. She's a bit brazen in the beginning, but don't let that put you off. She's just desperate, and her attitude gentles as she sees more opportunities open for her.

The romance is subtle as the circumstances call for that. The secondary characters play their roles well — those who are good are loving and those who are bad are quite ornery.  An all round sweet romance that lingers after the read.

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Strenthen me, O God, by the grace of thy holy Spirit.

Grant me to be strengthened with might in the inner man, and to empty my heart of all useless care and anguish; so that I be not drawn away with sundry desires of anything whatever, whether mean or precious, but that I look on all things as passing away, on myself also as soon to pass away with them.

For nothing abideth under the sun, where all things are vanity and vexation of spirit. O how wise is he that so considereth them!

O Lord, grant me heavenly wisdom, that I may learn above all things to seek and to find thee, above all things to enjoy and to love thee, and to think of all other things as they really are, according to thy wise ordering.

Grant me prudence to avoid him that flattereth me, and to endure patiently him that contradicteth me.

Because it is a great part of wisdom not to be moved with every wind of words, nor to give ear to an evil flatterer; for thus I shall walk securely in the way which I have begun.

 

[From Of the Imitation of Christ, Book II, Chapter XXVII, #4-5.]

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Categories : Prayers

Race Against Time by Christy Barritt

Saturday, November 10th, 2012

Race Against Time, Love Inspired Suspense, is a category romance about widowed mom, Madison Jacobs, and next-door-neighbor and police detective Brody Philips.  The suspense part is a serial killer who makes his victims look like suicides.

The book opens with a dramatic scene where this masked serial killer attacks Madison, but she is saved by Brody who is off his usual routine and jogging home when she screams. After she recovers, she explains that she wasn't trying to hang herself, but that someone had drugged her and forced her to write a suicide note.

As the search for the killer continues, Brody and Madison fight their attraction to each other for various reasons. Brody's main reason is that he doesn't think he is worthy since he had been a bit of a player in his younger years and a woman had killed herself  when he'd broken off their relationship. Madison's main reason for resisting Brody is that she'd had a great marriage, doesn't believe it can be dublicated, and doesn't want to settle for less.

The plot moves along with various suspense elements when the killer comes back to use Madison to taunt and leave messages for Brody.  Madison is a brave woman, because I promise you that the second time a psychotic murderer got a hold of me, I would have grabbed my son and been on the first plane to my parents in Florida. But she held out and worked with Brody to find the bad guy.

Often Love Inspired romances have a lot of repetitive elements, but that wasn't the case here — just a few repeated internal angst thoughts. The plot moved forward, the romance developed slowly and believably. My biggest grumble:  the climax.  All I'm going to say is what cop doesn't take a gun to a syringe fight?

I enjoy Christy Barritt's mysteries and this suspense was no different. I'm not positive I understood the serial killer's original motives very well when the story was all said and done, but on a life scale that's probably a good thing.

If you like Love Inspired Suspense, you'll definitely like Race Against Time.

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A Prayer for Good Government

Monday, November 5th, 2012

Holy God, today I pray again for the USA and for this coming day of voting for a new president.  We need You in the center of our world.  We need You changing hearts and minds, clearing us of all the worldly debris that is clogging us.  We need You and Your people to remind us of what is right and good and holy.  We don't know any longer.  We are all twisted up.  We think we understand and then we find out that we never even knew You.  You are that deep and amazing.
    Father, I pray for good government.  I ask You to give us good government in the USA.  I ask You to have mercy on us even though we haven't repented, we haven't humbled ourselves, we haven't sought Your face.  We haven't done any of the things that are required to bring about the promise, but I ask for it anyway.  I ask You to be merciful because You are merciful.  I ask You to give Your church another chance to wake up and be about the work that You've called us to.  I ask You, Lord God, on the very character of who You are, to remember Your Name which You placed in this nation hundreds of years ago. I know, Lord, that our ancestors weren't perfect, but the leaders believed that You were God and that You were involved in the ordinary and the extra-ordinary affairs of men.  They used Your Book when they laid out the principles to guide this nation. Remember what You started.  Bring the USA to its day of completion in Christ.  Does a man begin to build without considering the cost?  Neither, Father, would the great God of heaven, begin to build a nation without considering the cost and what it will take to complete it.  I'm sorry that hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, and terrorist attacks are not enough to draw our eyes up to You and acknowledge that You are Creator and Sovereign.
    But, still I ask You for good government, in spite of our evil and foolish thinking. In spite of our unwillingness to submit to You in all things and acknowledge Your greatness and mercy and love, I still ask for good government.  I ask it because Your Word says that You want us to have good government so that we may live in peace, so that the Gospel can go forward unimpeded, so that the Name of Jesus would be glorified.  So I ask You, Absolutely Able, to give us good government in the USA so that the Name of Jesus the Christ would be glorified in the Capitol Building, glorified in the White House, glorified in the Pentagon, glorified in NY and CA and TX and Maine, Florida, and beyond.  I ask You to glorify the Name of Jesus our Redeemer in the schools and colleges and universities, in the businesses and banks and Wall Street, in the hospitals and research labs and clinics. I ask You, our Blessed Assurance, to give us good government in our churches, in our courts, in our counties.  We are nothing without You.  We have nothing of worth.  We have no worth.  Unless You pour out Your grace upon us.
    So I ask You for good government because of our desperate need.  What father gives his son a snake when he asks for a fish?  Certainly not our loving Father. So I plead Your character of love before You this day.  We need good government.  We need leaders on all levels who will yield to Your Sovereignty and seek Your wisdom.  We need You involved in the work each person's heart.  We need Your Spirit moving across this country once again, free to enter any building or gathering, free to shepherd His children wherever they roam. We need Your Spirit to cleanse us again.  We need Your Spirit to purify us and prepare us for Jesus' return.  We need You for all these things, loving Father. It isn't the economy or even the form of government that terrifies me when I think of the future. Not the loss of freedoms or the possible persecution of Your church. What scares me about the end times is how Your church falls away, too.  How Your church rejects You.  How Your church refuses to suffer for Your Name.  How Your church doesn't get that You are worthy of every sacrifice that we possess and could offer.
    It shames me, Lord God, that we aren't any different than the world when it comes to the desires of our hearts, to our need for comfort and rights and glory.  That we want what we want when we want it.  That we don't think differently.  That we won't persevere longer. That we give in to temptation at the first volley. My God in heaven, I ask You to forgive Your church and wake us up, shake us up, teach us the Truth, the full truth of Your Holy Word via Your Holy Spirit who guides us into all Truth.  You know what we need and that's why I pray for You to bring us good government.  I don't ask for what my foolish heart clings to as right.  I ask for Your right.  I ask for Your mercy.  I ask for Your grace and Your Holy Spirit to have the right to move without infringement from the forces of evil in the heavenly realms.  I ask You to shine brighter than the sun, to burn up the evil that would encompass us.  I ask You to withhold Your righteous wrath again and to give us another chance to depend on You and trust You and submit to You and obey You.  Thank You for being a compassionate and loving God.  Thank You for providing what we need when we need it.  Thank You for not being swayed from Your ultimate goal of glorifying the Name.  You are worthy to be praised.  You are the only great and glorious God.  You are holy.  You are Sovereign King.  You are the Great I AM.  Before time began, You ARE.
    Thank You for not changing to suit the desires and cultures of man.  Thank You for being faithful to Your Word even when we are not.  Thank You for the shed blood of Jesus Christ that takes away the sin of the world.  Thank You for living again, Holy Jesus, and defeating death and sin and Satan at the Cross.  You are the Victor.  You are always the Victor.  You will reign forever.  Independent of the governments of men and the nations that rise and fall, You are LORD God Almighty, Maker of Heaven and Earth, Author and Perfecter of our faith, the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End. In You we have no fear of what this world offers during our short walk of faith.  We trust You.  We find peace in the shelter of Your wings, Strong Tower, Rock of Refuge, Shield, and One Hope.  To You be the glory, great things You have done and will do.
    Thank You for giving us good government. I choose to believe You hear the desperate cry of Your daughter asking in Your will: grant us good government that we may live in peace, that the Gospel will go forward unimpeded, that the Name of Jesus Christ will be glorified.  Amen and amen.
    In Jesus' name.  Amen.

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Categories : Prayers