Category Archives: FaithWords

Leave It To Claire By Tracey Bateman – From The Blog Archives

***Note, this is a repeat of an old blog post! Enjoy! I recall this novel being both funny and endearing.

Leave It To Claire by Tracey Bateman

Could you be friends with your unfaithful ex-husband’s new wife? The main character in Leave It To Claire struggles with this predicament.

I really enjoyed this book. The author has the perfect voice for chicklit(or momlit, not sure about the correct way to categorize this story). The story is about Claire Everett, a fairly successful romance author and the struggles she has to go through to raise her four kids as a single mother. Claire struggles to forgive her ex-husband, Rick, for his infidelity. He had an affair, and since their divorce, he’s gotten remarried. Claire finds it hard to have a relationship with Rick’s fairly new wife since Claire has a hard time separating the fact that Darcy is NOT the woman who Rick had an affair with. Subconsciously, and wrongly, she blames Darcy for her marital breakup.

As Claire deals with her issues, she suffers through two carpal tunnel syndrome surgeries, and struggles to accept Darcy’s kind offer to help. As a result of her son’s behavioral problems, she must attend family therapy with her husband and Darcy in order to discover the root to her son’s problems. She also makes a list of things to do to improve her life. She promises herself to strengthen her faith in God, as well as improve her relationship with her family. She decides to have family study time and weekly social events with her kids, hoping to bond with them.

Claire also finds herself attracted to Greg, her son’s handsome teacher. When her mother moves to another state, she is saddened. However, when Greg buys her mother’s home(down the street from her house) and moves in with his young daughter, Claire discovers he is a widower. She fantasizes about having a relationship with her son’s teacher, and he’s there for her when she goes through her anxiety attacks.

In the end, a rude awakening takes place when Darcy forces Claire to admit to her role in her husband’s infidelity. Darcy makes Claire come to terms with her mistakes, and to admit to the mistakes she’s made in her marriage to Rick.

This book was excellent. Although the family would be considered dysfunctional, the author uses her humorous voice to show how Claire deals with her problems. Tracey Bateman also shows us how, if we find our faith wavering, we need to make solid decisions about making our faith stronger in God.

So, could you be friends with your unfaithful ex-husband’s new wife? Leave a comment!

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~Cecelia Dowdy~

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?
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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~

Deborah Bedford And Karen Kingsbury


SPOILER ALERT!

A Morning Like This by Deborah Bedford

A Thousand Tomorrows by Karen Kingsbury

Here’s a summary, and my opinions about my vacation reading:

I recently finished a thousand tomorrows by Karen Kingsbury. I have another question about this title, similar to my questions about Ted DEKkER. Anybody know why the title of this novel was in lower case?

Karen Kingsbury is a very well-known Christian novelist. However, this is the first book I’ve read by her. I thought the book was good, and well-written, however, I wanted to place more thoughts and references to God into her story. Cody, a bull rider, is bitter and angry at his father for abandoning him, his mother, and his Down-syndrome stricken younger brother Carl Joseph. He releases his anger by riding bulls, becoming a top-notch bull rider in the process.

Ali Daniels is a successful horsewoman on the rodeo circuit. Ali and Cody cross paths over the years at rodeo shows. However, they never acknowledge one another. Ali has a secret: she suffers from cystic fibrosis. Finally, after years of silence between them, Cody and Ali do begin a relationship, they fall in love, and eventually, Ali convinces Cody to forgive his father, who, during the course of the story, returns to Cody’s mother and remarries her.

I could see the message of Christianity interwoven throughout this story. However, I still felt that the characters could have made more references to God, and to Christianity. Cody does forgive his parents, which is the Christian thing to do. However, I felt that he should have mentioned how the Lord worked through him, making him see that the right thing to do would be to forgive his parents.

An example of where I think God should have been mentioned was when Cody was alone with Ali, far from her house, and she has an asthma attack. He yells for her to “breathe, make her breathe.” I felt that he should have called directly upon God to help Ali with her asthma attack.

It was sad when Ali did die in the end, after Cody, and Ali’s father, both donated a lung to her so that she could gain a few more years of life.

This book was published under Warner’s/Hatchette Book Group’s Center Street imprint, NOT the Faith Words imprint. My research indicates that the Center Street imprint is NOT an inspirational imprint, per se, but it was “designed to build around the values and sensibilities of heartland America.” And “the titles ‘are’ written from a values-based perspective that is not necessarily a religious one.” – according to Publisher’s Weekly. This explanation may explain why this Kingsbury novel wasn’t very religious.

I also read A Morning Like This by Deborah Bedford. The premise of this novel reminded me of Truth Be Told by Victoria Christopher Murray. In Deborah’s novel David Treasure has a loving wife, Abby, a wonderful home life and a son named Braden. His mistress from several years ago, Susan, comes to town unexpectedly, practically forcing David to meet with her.

David discovers Susan has a daughter (named Samantha/Sam) that is his, who is around the same age as Braden. Sam is sick with leukemia, and she needs a bone marrow transplant. Susan wants David tested to see if he’s a match. When it’s discovered that he isn’t a match, Susan begs David to let Braden be tested since siblings are the most likely bone marrow transplant donors to be a match.

Her request forces David to tell Abby about his affair. Abby is floored, and their marriage goes through many trials and tribulations throughout the story. After he is tested, it is discovered that Braden is not a match, either.

Sam is not aware of the contact her mother has with her father. When Sam accidentally finds out where her father (David) lives, she runs away to meet him. She stays with David, Abby, and Braden for a week, and during that time, she grows close to her brother, but is bothered by Abby’s cold attitude towards her. Sam feels better when she discovers that Abby is upset about David’s affair, not about her presence in her home.

Sam and Braden surprisingly go to the altar and ask the church to be tested to see if they have a matching donor among the crowd. A perfect match is found and Sam is healed from her disease.

Abby discovers that David’s affair, which occurs during her pregnancy and for a short time after their son is born, was partially her fault. She realizes that she shut David out of her life, and she apologizes for the part she played in his indiscretion.

The reason why this book reminds me of Truth Be Told is because a life-threatening illness forces a former mistress to come forward with the husband’s illegitimate child, forcing the husband to tell his wife about his indiscretion. Murray’s novel had the former mistress to have AIDS, which prompts her to contact the father of her son so that he could raise him since she was going to die soon.

I thought both books, A Thousand Tomorrows and A Morning Like This were very good.

Right now, I’m reading Thr3e by Ted DEKkER. I’ll post about that one as time permits.

Stay blessed,
Cecelia Dowdy
www.ceceliadowdy.com