Posts

Showing posts from December, 2020

Tidewater Bride

Image
Tidewater Bride Laura Franz Bethany House Publishers Virginia Colony's most eligible woman is busy matchmaking for a ship of brides, though she has no interest in finding her own mate. Will she reconsider when new revelations about the colony's most eligible landowner come to light?  Selah Hopewell seems to be the only woman in the Virginia colony who has no wish to marry. True, Jamestown has a shortage of potential wives---but Selah has her hands full assisting in her family's shop. Xander Renick is the most eligible tobacco lord in the settlement. But can he convince Selah to become his Tidewater Bride?  While this isn't a genre I read too much anymore, there is something very nostalgic for me in coming back to Christian historical fiction. This one wasn't quite as much of a romance as I was expecting, but I enjoyed it more than the last book I read by this author ( A Bound Heart , if you're wondering). This novel's backstory is highly influenced by Pocaho

The Dress Shop on King Street

Image
The Dress Shop on King Street Ashley Clark Bethany House Publishers So I may or may not have a bit of a compulsion to read books that are set in Charleston- even just South Carolina in general. There aren’t a lot of books set here (unless you’re counting Southern Fiction, which isn’t usually my preferred genre) so whenever I see one, I tend to pick it up. Ashley Clark is a new author to me, and novels with dual timelines can be tricky, so I came into this one curious but skeptical.  True to form, I definitely found one storyline much more compelling than the other- something I find that tends to be a hazard of the time slip genre. Really, I only found Harper’s story interesting in so much as it connected to Millie’s (which, now that I think about it, is a little ironic, since most of those scenes are the ones not set in Charleston!) Millie’s story was bittersweet and left me with a bit of an ache; I may have also been more drawn to that one because at heart I’ll always be a histori