Category Archives: Book Talk

Angel Harp By Michael Phillips


Angel Harp by Michael Phillips

Product Description
Widowed at 34, amateur harpist Marie “Angel” Buchan realizes at 40 that her life and dreams are slowly slipping away. A summer in Scotland turns out to offer far more than she ever imagined! Not only does the music of her harp capture the fancy of the small coastal village she visits, she is unexpectedly drawn into a love triangle involving the local curate and the local duke.

The boyhood friends have been estranged as adults because of their mutual love of another woman (now dead) some years before. History seems destined to repeat itself, with Marie in the thick of it. Her involvement in the lives of the two men, as well as in the community, leads to a range of exciting relationships and lands Marie in the center of the mystery of a long-unsolved local murder. Eventually she must make her decision: with whom will she cast the lot of her future?
===
Overall, this book was a wonderful read and I think you should give the story a chance! It’s probably the longest book I’ve read so far in
2011. Canadian harpist Marie is widowed and suffering from depression. She recalls how she used to daydream with her deceased husband about visiting Scotland. She takes a summer off from teaching harp lessons to visit Scotland. When she arrives in a small town in Scotland, she finds a place she wants to stay for awhile. She rents a cottage and takes long walks, sitting on her favorite bench, playing the harp. During these excursions she manages to meet a preacher/curate (Iain), a duke (Alasdair), and an old religious man (Ranald) who enjoys playing the fiddle and talking about God. Marie soon finds that she’s the subject of interest in the small Scottish town, especially when she begins dating both the duke and the curate. There’s also a sickly girl named Gwendolyn whom Marie befriends. Gwendolyn and her Aunt Olivia create a strange twist to the story – a twist that’s co-mingled with Iain’s and Alasdair’s lives.

After about the first fifty or sixty pages, the story moved pretty well. The scenery on the Scottish coastline was vivid, and I wanted to see that pretty water and those dolphins myself. The characters were real and I felt that I really knew the people in this small town. Marie’s connection to her harp is real and stunning, kind of like the connection that most writers have with their writing and creating stories. She plays the harp for solace and she enjoys teaching others her craft. The love triangle was interesting, too, and you were surprised at what happens when you read this story.

Although there was much to love about this book, I saw some things I would’ve liked to change:
#1. I would’ve cut off the first fifty or sixty pages of the book when Marie is still in Canada, suffering from her loneliness and depression. While reading this part, I grew very bored. In this section, there was NO DIALOG…at all! It was just Marie’s depressing thoughts about being by herself and missing her husband. I almost didn’t finish the book because of the way it started out. I’m glad I didn’t stop reading and kept at it, giving the book a fair chance. If I’d stopped reading, then I would’ve missed a good treat of a story.

#2. Dialect. I had NO IDEA what the common folk in Scotland were saying…at all! In writing, I’ve always been taught that dialect should be used sparingly. This author uses dialect for most of the townspeople. I understood conversations between Marie and the curate and duke – they spoke without the annoying dialect. I know there’s a glossary in the back of the book, but, when I’m reading a novel, I’m not going to look at a glossary to figure out what somebody is saying. As a matter of fact, it’s rare for me stop and look up much of anything while reading a novel, I’m reading to be entertained, and it’s too bothersome to stop and figure something out.

#3. I’ll admit that I skipped pages, several times. Sometimes, the author rambled about God and beliefs and salvation. An example of this is when Marie is talking to Ranald and Ranald gives her a brief religious history of Scotland…in dialect. I skipped over this. Passages like this were boring to me, if I want a brief religious history about Scotland, I’ll go to a history book and read about it myself. I don’t want to read so much detail about it in a novel.

Over all, this book was a good read and the author is a good writer. I think you should give this book a chance – don’t give up too quickly like I almost did. The author did do a great job in showing Marie’s spiritual journey. Marie has a strong struggle with her faith – her faith has weakened considerably since her husband’s untimely death and as a result, she no longer goes to church. That is, until she meets Iain and her life takes a drastic turn.

Oatcakes photo courtesy of Undiscovered Scotland – click on link for recipe. If you try it, let me know how it tastes.

As I do sometimes with book reviews, I wanted to mention a food item featured in this novel. The characters kept mentioning oatcakes. I’d never heard of oatcakes until I’d read this novel. I know I’d said I don’t usually stop and look things up while reading a novel, but I did finally look up oatcakes because everybody kept eating them for breakfast, lunch, teatime, nighttime, etc. I finally had to look it up on the internet. I found a few recipes and I’m thinking about making them myself. It seems that oatcakes are Scottish and that they eat them over there a lot. I’m assuming they harvest a lot of oats over in Scotland, hence the appeal of oatcakes. You can eat them plain or with butter and jam, or meat or cheese. The Scottish reminded me of the British with their tea time and their foods, which would make sense considering the history of the Scots.

Many thanks to Faith Words for providing me with a free review copy of this book.

I’ll top of this blog post with few questions: Have you ever eaten oatcakes? If so, did you like them? If you’ve eaten them, were they store-bought or homemade?
~Cecelia Dowdy~

Fatal Judgment By Irene Hannon


Fatal Judgment by Irene Hannon
From the Back Cover
U.S. Marshal Jake Taylor has seen plenty of action during his years in law enforcement. But he’d rather go back to Iraq than face his next assignment: protection detail for federal judge Liz Michaels. His feelings toward the coldhearted workaholic haven’t warmed in the five years since she drove her husband–and Jake’s best friend–to despair . . . and possible suicide.

As the danger mounts and Jake gets to know Liz better, he’s forced to revise his opinion of her. And when it becomes clear that an unknown enemy may want her dead, the stakes are raised. Because now both her life–and his heart–are in danger.

Full of suspense and romance, Fatal Judgment is a thrilling story that will keep you turning the pages late into the night.
==
Federal Judge Liz Michael’s life has taken a strong blow. Her sister, who was temporarily staying with her, has been murdered and Marshal Jake Taylor is assigned to protect Liz – what if her life is in danger, too? At first, Liz doesn’t think her life is in danger, after all, Liz’s sister, Stephanie, was hiding at Liz’s, trying to heal emotionally and physically from the abuse that her husband has inflicted upon her. She’s pregnant, and she didn’t want her abusive husband to hurt their unborn baby. When she’s shockingly murdered, Liz thinks the abusive husband has shot her sister.

However, Stephanie’s husband’s grief seems too raw, and too real. The marshalls conclude that Stephanie’s husband can’t be the one who shot her…that’s when they begin to assume the shooter shot the wrong woman – Liz may have been his intended target.

Throughout this story, both Liz and Jake’s faith is tested as Liz is taken into seclusion for her own safety. Jake finds himself smitten with Liz. Liz was his deceased college roommate’s wife, and Jake thought she was a cold, unfeeling workaholic, after awhile Jake finds that he’s been getting the wrong information about Liz.

Meanwhile, Jake has his own grief. He’s still struggling with the guilt he harbors for his wife’s death. He holds himself responsible and hasn’t forgiven himself for her tragic accident.

While a lunatic plots to kill Liz, both Jake and Liz grow closer as Jake hopes not to fail in this assignment.

This book was a real page-turner and I highly recommend it for those who enjoy good, romantic suspense. I was up late into the night reading this novel, and it’s rare for me to stay up past my bedtime reading a book nowadays! You really feel for the characters – and the way the villian was portrayed was haunting – he could’ve been your next door neighbor and you wouldn’t have suspected he was plotting to kill. Overall, a very good read.

Many thanks to Baker/Revell for providing me with a free review copy.

~Cecelia Dowdy~

Never Been Kissed By Melody Carlson


Never Been Kissed by Melody Carlson

From the Back Cover
New School = New Chance for That First Kiss
Summer is ending, and for once that doesn’t seem like such a bad thing to Elise. She’s hoping that starting fresh at a new high school will turn her first-kiss prospects around. New guys, new friends, and a new lease on life.

What she wasn’t counting on was all the new pressure–to hang with the right crowd, wear the right clothes, and date the right guy. Just when it seems she’s on top of the world, everything comes crashing down. Could one bad choice derail her future?

This book will be kind of nostalgic, reminding you how you felt when you were a young, insecure teenager. Elise has moved with her mother to a new town. When she meets the “in” crowd at school, sharing a lunch table with them, she feels that she’s on top of the world. Finally, it appears she’s being accepted. Wanting to elevate her feelings of self-worth, she lies to her young friend, who lives in her apartment building, telling the story about a fake boyfriend back at home and the booming social life that she used to have.

Now that she’s in a new school it appears that Asher, one of the most popular guys in the school, really likes her, however, his girlfriend keeps getting in the way, and Elise just wants them to break up so that she can be with him. When she starts receiving secret emails from Asher, telling of his true feelings, she hopes that things will work out between them.

However, things go awry when Elise is arresting for sexting. Stunned, she doesn’t know what to do. Her faith is tested as she comtemplates the worst.

I enjoyed this book. I think it should be recommended reading for all teenagers. I think they can learn a huge lesson from Elise’s experiences. Elise finds herself tried and almost convicted, barely giving her a chance to defend herself. The book also shows how seriously the law regards the crime of sexting. I think most young people may not be aware of the extreme nature of this offense, and by reading this book, it will make them more aware.

I highly recommend this book, especially if you have a teenager.

Many thanks to Baker/Revell for providing me with a free review copy.

~Cecelia Dowdy~

Bake Until Golden


Bake Until Golden by Linda Shepherd Evans and Eva Marie Everson
From the Back Cover
Two cups of flour, a cup of sugar . . . and a generous pinch of scandal
The ladies of the Potluck Catering Club may have thought that competing on The Great Party Showdown reality show in New York City would be the biggest adventure of their lives. But they weren’t counting on the strange goings-on they would confront when they returned to Summit View, Colorado.

When a shocking event rocks their small town, the ladies are stunned–especially when the fingers start pointing at one of them. Will old friends stick together through their trials? Or will they be torn apart by tragedy?

Full of mystery, friendship, and faith, Bake Until Golden is the final book in this popular series.

Linda Evans Shepherd and Eva Marie Everson are award-winning authors, successful speakers, radio personalities, and avid readers of fiction. They are the popular authors of The Potluck Club, The Potluck Club–Trouble’s Brewing, The Potluck Club–Takes the Cake, and the Potluck Catering Club series. They’ve also led numerous Bible studies and women’s retreats. Linda lives in Colorado and Eva Marie lives in Florida.
==
My thoughts? This book was well-written, and I could see a lot of people being intrigued by the storyline. You have a group of ladies who run the Potluck Catering Club, and they’re local celebrities in their small town. Each woman is going through an emotional drama. The dramas deal with various topics such as: death of a spouse, a cheating boyfriend, a daughter who has to go to a foreign country to see her husband who’s been in a life-threatening accident, and the murder of an old friend. I found it hard to keep all of the characters straight in my mind. But, this is no reflection upon the writers, it’s just the way that I’m wired as a reader. I usually have a hard time reading novels where you have a bunch of women (more than 2 or 3) and each character has a point-of-view. After awhile, with so many points of view, I can’t remember the names of each character from chapter to chapter, and then I have to try and remember how all these females are connected. I’d recommend this novel if you want a slightly suspenseful read with lots of viewpoints and lots of characters.

On the upside, since this is the Potluck Catering Club, food is mentioned throughout the novel and I loved that! Also, there are many tasty-sounding recipes in the back of the book! I think I’ll keep this book and try some of those recipes! The recipe for Sunshine Cake sounds simply scrumptious! Also, the cover is fabulous! I want a piece of that yellow cake with chocolate icing! Yum! 🙂

Oh, many thanks to Baker/Revell for providing me with a review copy of this novel.

~Cecelia Dowdy~

Tandem By Tracey Bateman


Tandem by Tracey Bateman

As obsession and loss become dark partners, how far must the people of Abbey Hills go to survive?

Six months ago, brutal murders shook the small Ozark town—murders that stopped after a house fire reportedly claimed the killer’s life. Lauryn McBride’s family auction house has taken responsibility for the estate sale of one of the victims—the enigmatic Markus Chisom. Submerging herself in Chisom’s beautiful but strange world, Lauryn welcomes the reprieve from watching Alzheimer’s steal her father from her, piece by piece. She soon realizes that centuries-old secrets tie Abbey Hills to the Chisom estate and a mysterious evil will do anything to make sure those secrets stay hidden. Even the man who grew up loving her may not be able to protect Lauryn from the danger.

When Amede Dastillon receives an unexpected package from Abbey Hills, she hopes it might be the key in tracking down her beloved sister, long estranged from her family. Visiting Abbey Hills seems the logical next step in her search, but Amede is unusually affected by the town, and when mutilated carcasses begin turning up again in the small community, the local law enforcement isn’t sure if they are confronting a familiar evil or a new terror.

Two women brought together by questions that seem to have no answers. Can they overcome the loss and darkness threatening to devour them—or will their own demons condemn them to an emotional wasteland?
===
This book is the sequel to the novel, Thirsty. Lauryn is the owner of an auction house business. Markus, a vampire who was killed in a fire, has an estate that needs to be settled. Lauryn forwards some old letters found in Markus’s house to Amede, a member of an old family who has ties to Markus. Amede comes to Abbey Hills seeking more familial heirlooms, but, in reality, she needs to find her estranged sister, Eden, who did not die in the fire with Markus, as most of the town assumes.

I think I enjoyed Thirsty more than Tandem. I’m not sure why. It could be because Thirsty dealt with an alcoholic and that’s a theme that I like to read about in novels. I think the author did a great job with the characterization with Lauryn and her battle with caring for her ill father. As her father’s Alzheimer’s gets worse, it’s hard for Lauyrn to accept that she may need to let her father go if she’s not able to care for him any longer. The battle of caring for an older parent, for an only child, is something that lots of people struggle with, but I felt that the father in this story was a bit selfish. I sensed that he didn’t want his daughter to be happy with anybody…except himself. But, that could’ve just been my interpretation of the situation. I didn’t think Lauryn’s dad wanted to see her happily married with children, and that’s kind of sad when you think about it.

There’s a deep, dark mystery woven into this story as people and animals are killed, in an almost ritualistic way. The killings are being done by a vampire, but, it’s a mystery as to which vampire is doing the killing. I think it’s a bit hard reading about vampires in a Christian novel because such creatures don’t exist, but in the book, they do exist, yet, you know they’re not a true part of God’s creation.

The theme of unrequited love pops up when Billy, the preacher’s son, appears, complete with a bi-racial daughter who looks exactly like him. Lauryn has had a crush on Billy since elementary school and that crush has never developed into a full-blown romance. Billy abandons Lauryn on graduation night and she doesn’t see him again until his recent appearance. Bits and pieces of backstory are thrown into the book regarding Lauryn’s upbringing and her “romantic” moments with Billy.

Also, you’ll see the main characters in Thirsty make a few cameo appearances in Tandem, which was nice.

This is definitely a chilling, mysterious book and I recommend it to those who’d want to read a book about the supernatural with a Christian message.

~Cecelia Dowdy~

The Thing About Beauty By Donna Riemel Robinson


The Thing About Beauty by Donna Reimel Robinson

Being beautiful has its drawbacks.
Tonya Brandt wants to marry a handsome man, someone who will complement her own beauty. But she’s dated every hot guy in town without finding someone who loves her for her mind and talents.

Murray Twichell knows his chances with Tonya are about as big as a snowball in July, but somehow, he can’t get her out of his mind. He’s not very handsome, so he figures she would never date him. If only he could get to know the real Tonya without her discovering who he is.

When a secret admirer begins sending Tonya gifts and letters, she is excited. But who is this mystery man? She loves his personality, but what does he look like?

When Tonya finally discovers her secret admirer’s identity, will she reject him? Or will she learn that true beauty is more than skin deep?

===
This book was a light, endearing read that wasn’t heavy on conflict. Tonya is beautiful and she’s not getting any younger. She’s involved in her singles group at church, and finds herself smitten with one of the members of the singles group. BUT, Murray Twichell, a nightmare from her childhood, keeps popping up in her life. A cop, Murray makes a habit of giving Tonya speeding tickets, and she’s not very attracted to him, either. Whenever he’s around, Tonya finds herself bristling as she recalls the horrid time that Murray dropped a frog down her shirt when she was a youngster.

Then, Tonya’s life takes a drastic turn when she starts receiving expensive gifts and cards from a secret admirer! The secret admirer also gives his email address and she begins having conversations with this man online. She finds herself falling for her secret admirer and Tonya, and the rest of her small town, wonder who this secret man is? What will happen when she finds the identity of her admirer?

This is a good book to read if you want a story that’s breezy, light, and not too thought-provoking.

Occasionally, when I read a book, and if it reminds me of another title, I’ll mention it. The premise of this book reminded me of a Robin Jones Gunn book that I read ages ago called Echoes. So I wanted to add that if you enjoyed Echoes, you’ll enjoy The Thing About Beauty.

Tonya Brandt also wanted to pen her own cookbook and The Thing About Beauty often mentioned Tonya’s secret cream cheese brownies. Several characters in the book loved these brownies and the recipe was provided in the back of the novel. Here’s the recipe. I haven’t tried them yet, but I do plan on trying them sometime in the future:

Tonya’s Terrific Brownies
Chocolate Layer:
6 ounces semisweet baking chocolate
1/2 cup canola oil
3/4 cup sugar
1 1/2 teaspooons vanilla
3 eggs
3/4 cup flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup semisweet chocolate chunks

Cream Cheese Layer:
8 ounces cream cheese
1/4 cup sugar
1 egg

Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Lightly grease an 8-inch square pan; dust with flour.
Melt baking chocolate in a double boiler over boiling water, stirring while melted. Remove from heat and whisk in oil, sugar and vanilla. Whisk in eggs, one at a time. Stir in flour and salt until just blended. Fold in chocolate chunks.

In another bowl, beat cream cheese wtih sugar and egg. Spread 2/3 of the chocolate mixture in the baking pan; spoon tte cheese mixture over the chocolate layer; spoon the remaining chocolate on top. Drag knife through to swirl.

Bake for 40 to 45 minutes. Insert a toothpick to test. Let cool in pan for 20 minutes for warm brownies that y ou can eat with a fork, or cool completely for terrific finger-held brownies. Enjoy!

~Cecelia Dowdy~

Two Tickets To The Christmas Ball By Donita K. Paul

Two Tickets To The Christmas Ball by Donita K. Paul

Can mysterious matchmaking booksellers bring two lonely hearts together in time for Christmas?

In a sleepy, snow-covered city, Cora Crowder is busy preparing for the holiday season. Searching for a perfect gift, a fortuitous trip to Warner, Werner, and Wizbotterdad’s (a most unusual bookshop) leads to an unexpected encounter with co-worker Simon Derrick. And the surprise discovery of a ticket for a truly one-of-a-kind Christmas Ball.

Every year, the matchmaking booksellers of the Sage Street bookshop host an enchanting, old-fashioned Christmas Ball for the romantic matches they’ve decided to bring together.

This year, will Simon and Cora discover a perfect chemistry in their opposite personalities and shared faith? Or will the matchmakers’ best laid plans end up ruining everything this holiday?

This book was a pleasant, short, easy read that wasn’t too deep or thought-provoking. Cora is a Christian, estranged from her worldly family. She lives alone in her apartment with her cat and she works in an office building. Mysterious Simon Derrick has worked in Cora’s office building for several years yet he’s never noticed her until he runs into her at the mysterious bookshop on Sage Street – she’s such an unknown person to him that he can’t even remember her name. Through the bookstore owners, both Simon and Cora receive unsolicited tickets to the Wizards Ball.

Through a series of events, Simon and Cora spend time together and Cora meets Simon’s family, which includes his sister, Sandy, who has Down’s Syndrome.

This story takes place in the future, and I’d love to have known the year which this story takes place. There are little things mentioned, dropped here and there, which makes the reader aware that this isn’t a story that takes place in modern times. The few things mentioned were the office building where Simon and Cora worked, the walls to the offices were glass and you could see what was going on in all offices. I’ve never seen a glass-walled office before. Also, Simon receives a phone call that’s a wrong number and he mentions that crossed phone wires were something that stopped happening a long time ago.

There was also a bit of fantasy thrown into this story. Sage Street, the location of the bookstore and the Wizards Ball, is a pleasant street filled with shops and customers milling around on the sidewalk, however, Sage Street is not always easy to find. It’s a hidden street and not all can see this fantastical place as they cruise by.

If you want a quick Christmas read, then this book is for you. The only thing I was puzzled about was Cora’s relationship with her cat. Her cat gets pregnant and Cora gets extremely upset and cries, and she feels responsible for her cat’s unwanted pregnancy. She compares her cat’s unruly behavior to the behavior of one of her wayward relatives. I didn’t quite understand the analogy since an animal getting pregnant is much different than a human’s lewd behavior, plus, it’s not as if cats can get married and plan families like humans do. This part of the book went over my head a little bit, but the rest of the story was enjoyable.

~Cecelia Dowdy~

The Particular Sadness Of Lemon Cake By Aimee Bender


***Please note that this is a secular title…
The Particular Sadness Of Lemon Cake by Aimee Bender

I saw this book mentioned via the Goodreads.com newsletter a few weeks back. I was so intrigued by the description that I ordered this title. I found it intriguing because of the food aspect. I love writing about food in my own work and some readers have told me that they get hungry when they read my novels! 🙂

Rose is celebrating her ninth birthday, and her mother bakes her a lemon cake. This cake drastically changes her life. She can taste her mother’s despondent mood in the cake. Soon, Rose finds her life spinning out of control, because when she tastes food, she tastes the emotions of the people who have prepared the foods. As you can imagine, a lot of people experience sadness and negative emotions and Rose can taste these feelings in her meals, and she finds herself not wanting to eat people’s food because the food tastes bad. She can also taste other things in the food, like, the country/state where the vegetables were grown. She can taste place the butter was manufactured. She can even taste the factories where the food was produced.

Rose does learn to deal with her “problem” by getting food from vending machines. These types of foods, made in factories, don’t encompass such an awful taste. When she does stumble upon prepared food that she enjoys, she clings to that source, wanting food from that person since it’s a rarity for her to find food that tastes good.

This book also delves into the complexities of familial relationships. Rose can knows what illicit activities her mother engages in through her food. Rose also has a hard-to-define relationship with her troubled older brother, Joe.

The book spans through several years – starting when Rose is nine and ending when Rose is in her early twenties. Her brother Joe has a best friend named George, and when Rose first discovers her food “gift” George is the only person who takes her claims seriously, and tries to get to the root of Rose’s food “problem.” Her infatuation with George increases over time since he pays more attention to her than Joe does.

I consider this book to be a literary work of fiction and, I’ll admit, I was a bit lost at the end. But I can’t tell how I felt lost without giving away a major spoiler. So, if you’ve read this book, could you email me or leave a comment so that we can discuss it? Also, I’d like for you to leave a comment about your thoughts concerning the description of this title.

~Cecelia Dowdy~
From the cover:
On the eve of her ninth birthday, unassuming Rose Edelstein, a girl at the periphery of schoolyard games and her distracted parents’ attention, bites into her mother’s homemade lemon-chocolate cake and discovers she has a magical gift: she can taste her mother’s emotions in the cake. She discovers this gift to her horror, for her mother — her cheerful, good-with-crafts, can-do mother — tastes of despair and desperation. Suddenly, and for the rest of her life, food becomes a peril and a threat to Rose.

The curse her gift has bestowed is the secret knowledge all families keep hidden — her mother’s life outside the home, her father’s detachment, her brother’s clash with the world. Yet as Rose grows up she learns to harness her gift and becomes aware that there are secrets even her taste buds cannot discern.

The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake is a luminous tale about the enormous difficulty of loving someone fully when you know too much about them. It is heartbreaking and funny, wise and sad, and confirms Aimee Bender’s place as “a writer who makes you grateful for the very existence of language” (San Francisco Chronicle).

Always Yesterday By Jeri Odell



Always Yesterday – Book One In The Sierra Weddings Collection

As a female cop, Delanie Cooper is on her most difficult assignment yet. To stop a baby-selling ring, she goes undercover as an unmarried, pregnant teen. Her new partner, Eli Logan, plays the father. With his rugged good looks, Delanie doesn`t have to fake attraction, but Eli`s rough exterior and bitterness toward women make it hard even to be friends. Eli is outraged at having another female partner. His last one nearly got him killed, and she wasn`t the first woman to let him down. He`s sure he`ll never need another woman in his life or anyone else, not even God. His past has shown him he can only count on himself. Amidst danger and deceit can Eli forget the pain of yesterday to see something different in Delanie? And will he come to know God, the only One who will never let him down?

This book was a quick, pleasant read. Eli was abandoned by his mother, his father’s an alcoholic, and his brother died from a drug overdose. Plus, he’s had a negative experience with a female cop. When he meets beautiful Delanie, his new partner, it’s rough for him to ignore their shared attraction. However, Delanie and her family are strong Christians and Eli wants nothing to do with God. As Eli mentors teens, and is urged to hang out at the Christian teen center with his mentees, he finds himself seeking answers to questions he’s had about the Lord for several years.

Delanie also finds herself smitten with her new partner as they try to bust a baby-selling ring. Offended by Eli’s attitude against women cops, Delanie stands up for herself, proving her worth. As she falls for Eli, she knows that they can never be together since it’s a sin to be unequally yoked with a non-believer. I thought the author did a good job of showing how deeply Delanie and Eli were attracted to one another, but could not be together because of their non-shared religious beliefs. There’s also a side story involving one of Delaney’s best friends who’s struggling with marrying a non-believer. This thread proved intriguing, also.

This story moved pretty fast and you get caught up in the characters and their lives while they perform their jobs as cops. It was a light, sweet, enjoyable story with a small dose of suspense thrown into the mix.

~Cecelia Dowdy~

Quick Christmas Reads! :-)


I wanted to mention a set of Christmas short stories that I recently read entitled Christmas Grace by Robin Bayne and Laura Hamby.

Christmas Grace by Laura Hamby
Hannah Kelsey, now orphaned by the War Between the States, awaits patiently for news of her one, surviving brother. A life that has been anything but easy is made more complicated by the Yankee soldier she finds lying in front of her cabin a few days before the Christmas of 1864.

The Scent of Falling Snow by Robin Bayne
Aideen O’Conner felt a certain twinge when Rob Novak walked into her dance studio. Was it because she thought he didn’t take her seriously, or because she was afraid he would?

When Rob visits his daughter’s step-dancing teacher, he makes it clear he doesn’t consider the activitiy a challenge. The real challange comes when he learns the teacher’s secret.

Christmas Grace is a historical short story that takes place during the Civil War. Hannah is a tough woman who lives alone – her whole planation has been burned to the ground and she’s forced to fend for herself. When she finds a wounded enemy soldier on her property, what should she do? Does God want her to help the enemy? Being around this man unnerves her – in a good sort of way. She’s been alone for so long that she’s forgotten the feeling of love, companionship, and camaraderie with another person. As the story unfolds, you’ll discover that Hannah’s new cabin mate can cause lots of turmoil in her life.

The Scent of Falling Snow is a contemporary short story. Aideen runs a dance studio, and she’s lost custody of her daughter due to the mistake she’s made. Although she’s able to visit her daughter, she hasn’t forgiven herself for her rash, bitter actions against her ex-husband’s wife. When Rob discovers the truth behind Aideen’s actions, he’s devastated. Can Aideen learn to forgive herself and learn to love Rob?

Both of these stories were quick, enjoyable reads and you could easily read both of them in one or two evenings.

So, grab a cup of hot coffee and some Christmas cookies and enjoy these short holiday stories! These tales are nice little treats to savor during the Christmas rush! 🙂

~Cecelia Dowdy~

Photo courtesy of Paul – Free Digital Photos