Category Archives: Eva Marie Everson

Chasing Sunsets By Eva Marie Everson

Chasing Sunsets by Eva Marie Everson

This book was light and refreshing. Kimberly is recently divorced from her husband. Amid child-custody disputes, she finds herself alone for part of the summer. Kimberly’s father sends her to Cedar Key to find a new housekeeper to clean their summer home. This is the first time Kim has been to Cedar Key since the untimely death of her mother.

During her short visit, she become familiar with some of the locals:
1. Patsy – her elderly next door neighbor and Christian confidante
2. Kim meets a local photographer. Kim has given up photography years ago, and her visit to Cedar Key makes her long for her old hobby of shooting beautiful pictures.
3. Stephen – Kim’s high-school romance ended abruptly when Stephen got married to another woman, breaking things off with Kim. Now he’s back in the picture, divorced and the father of a college-aged daughter.
4. Rosa – Kim’s childhood best friend now treats Kim like a stranger. Kimberly has no idea why Rosa is giving her the cold shoulder – they were as close as two peas in a pod while growing up and now Rosa is a successful real estate agent. Kim wonders about Rosa’s frosty attitude.

Can Kim find it in her heart to forgive Stephen for the past? Also, can she open up her heart and learn to fall in love again?

I noticed the author always described what everybody was wearing using brand names and stuff. I’m not much into clothing and didn’t care much for reading about the brand names and color-schemes of sneakers and shirts and dresses. However, this didn’t take away from the story, and I can imagine that lots of other women would enjoy the detailed descriptions of everybody’s clothing.

Overall, I enjoyed this story as it shows how we can heal our past relationships and learn to lean on God for understanding. Kimberly learns that she can’t always control the actions of others, but needs to seek God’s will to make important decisions in her life.

Many thanks to Baker/Revell for providing a free review copy of this novel.

~Cecelia Dowdy~
From the Back Cover
Sometimes you get a second chance at your first love

Kimberly Tucker’s life hasn’t turned out the way she thought it would. While her ex is living it up, she struggles to understand what went wrong. When her two sons end up spending five weeks of summer vacation with their father, Kim plans a respite at the family vacation home on tiny Cedar Key. As she revisits the long-forgotten past, she discovers that treasures in life are often buried, and sometimes you do get a second chance at love.

Let yourself get swept away to an island retreat of warm tropical breezes, sandy beaches, and the most glorious sunsets you can imagine.

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~

This Fine Life By Eva Marie Everson


This Fine Life by Eva Marie Everson
Product Details
Pub. Date: May 2010
Publisher: Baker Publishing Group
Format: Paperback, 352pp
Sales Rank: 176,399
ISBN-13: 9780800732745
ISBN: 080073274X
Edition Description: Original

It is the summer of 1959 and Mariette Puttnam has just graduated from boarding school. When she returns to her privileged life at home, she isn’t sure where life will take her. More schooling? A job? Marriage? Nothing feels right. How could she know that the answer is waiting for her within the narrow stairwell of her father’s apparel factory, exactly between the third and fourth floors?

In this unique and tender story of an unlikely romance, popular author Eva Marie Everson takes readers on a journey through the heart of a young woman bound for the unknown. Readers will experience the joys of new love, the perseverance of true friendship, and the gift of forgiveness that comes from a truly fine life.

This book surprised me. I thought it started off a bit slow, but, after a little while, I got into the characters and their lives. Mariette has lived a privileged life and after she returns from boarding school as a recent high-school graduate of a presitigous Catholic academy, she doesn’t know what to do with herself. Her parents argue about her future, and she’s unsure about going to college, getting married, etc. She finds her future spouse in the stairwell of her father’s company. Thayne is a mail-clerk and it’s love at first sight for these two. They only share a couple of dates and her parents strong objections before they do the unthinkable.

The story focuses on their lives as they get married young and Thayne follows his dream of becoming a pastor and going to seminary. He feels called to do this, but, Mariette has a hard time understanding what a “calling” really is. How do you have a close relationship with God? She never prays alone, and thinks that God is somebody who is far away, and that we can only speak to him in church on Sunday.

When the couple arrives at the small town of Logan’s Creek for Thayne’s first pastorship, their lives change forever. Most of the town’s women hate Mariette. Also, Logan’s Creek has a dirty, haunting secret that proves traumatizing to one of the residents. Once this secret is exposed, the town is greatly affected.

This story was mesmerizing and you will want to read on to find out what happens between this young couple. Also, there are things that happen that are so totally unexpected, a lot of twists and turns that keep the story interesting. The story was also unique because of the time that it took place. Seldom do you see books out there that take place during the sixties.

I found this book to be a much better read than this one that I read by the same author about a year ago. Although Things Left Unspoken was a fairly good story, I felt this one was much better, more riveting, and it also kept me up late at night reading.

~Cecelia Dowdy~

Things Left Unspoken by Eva Marie Everson


Things Left Unspoken by Eva Marie Everson
Paperback: 381 pages
Publisher: Revell (June 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0800732731
ISBN-13: 978-0800732738

***Just a reminder that I’m giving this book away. See this blog entry for details.

From Amazon.com
From the Back Cover
Every family–and every house–has its secrets. Jo-Lynn Hunter is at a crossroads in life when her great-aunt Stella insists that she return home to restore the old family manse in sleepy Cottonwood, Georgia. Jo-Lynn longs to get her teeth into a noteworthy and satisfying project. And it’s the perfect excuse for some therapeutic time away from her husband. Beneath the dust and the peeling wallpaper, things are not what they seem, and what Jo-Lynn doesn’t know about her family holds just as many surprises. Was her great-grandfather the pillar of the community she thought he was? What is Aunt Stella hiding? And will her own marriage survive the renovation? Jo-Lynn isn’t sure she wants to know the truth–but sometimes the truth has a way of making itself known.

Jo-Lynn Hunter has lost her job. She’s also recently lost her elderly Uncle Jim. Estranged from her husband, Evan, Jo-Lynn needs a project to keep her busy. She agrees to help restore the old family mansion in Cottonwood Georgia as part of a town restoration project. However, as she begins to clean the house and go through it, she finds secrets lurking in the walls of the big house. Was her great-grandfather really a pillar in the Cottonwood community? Should she keep his illicit affairs hidden?

Jo-Lynn’s life is plagued with secrets, and, as she continues to work on the house, she finds that her life is now in danger. Who wants to stop her from doing this project and why would somebody actually set her family home on fire?

Upon her visit in Cottonwood, Jo-Lynn makes friends who make a great impact upon her life. There’s Valentine Bach, the elderly carpenter who rebuilds her home with his crew. She finds that he shares more with her family than just a casual frienship. She also makes friends with Karol, a consultant who is helping with the Cottonwood restoration project. However, when Jo-Lynn befriends a set of teen-aged twin girls, she wonders what her life would have been like if she’d had children. Still angered at her husband, Evan, for not wanting children in their lives, she wonders if there’s hope for them to work through their numerous marital problems.

There’s also a serious twist, one that I was totally not expecting, towards the end of the novel. Also the spiritual thread is lightly woven throughout the story without being too preachy. This book is a nice, cozy, lightly-suspenseful read.

~Cecelia Dowdy~

Here is the press release from the publisher:
Life in the South—and the secrets it keeps
A project to revamp an old family house takes readers on a windy ride through past and present in this rich, contemporary novel

Inspired by author Eva Marie Everson’s own Southern family, her latest book, Things Left Unspoken, has been described as “a lovely and deeply moving story,” and “Southern in the best tradition.”

In this stand-alone novel, main character Jo-Lynn Hunter is at a crossroads in life when her great-aunt Stella insists that she return home to restore the old family house in sleepy Cottonwood, Georgia. Seeing the project as the perfect excuse for some therapeutic time away from her self-absorbed husband and his snobby Atlanta friends, Jo-Lynn longs to get her teeth into a noteworthy and satisfying project.

Beneath the dust and the peeling wallpaper, things are not what they seem, and what Jo-Lynn doesn’t know about her family holds just as many surprises. Was her great-grandfather the pillar of the community she thought he was? What is Aunt Stella hiding? And will her own marriage survive the renovation?

Jo-Lynn isn’t sure she wants to know the truth—but sometimes the truth has a way of making itself known.

“…a splendid book by one of the South’s best contemporary authors.”

“…a gateway into a world of small towns, family secrets and lost loves.”

“…a story of restoration, not only of a house and town,
but of innermost parts of a human being.”

Eva Marie Everson is an award-winning author, a successful speaker, and a popular radio personality. She is coauthor of the Potluck Club series and the Potluck Catering Club series. Things Left Unspoken was inspired by her own Southern family history. She lives in Casselberry, Florida.

Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group, offers practical books that bring the Christian faith to everyday life. They publish resources from a variety of well-known brands and authors, including their partnership with MOPS (Mothers of Preschoolers) and Hungry Planet.

For more information, visit www.RevellBooks.com.

Excerpt from Things Left Unspoken

In the early days, beyond the rose-covered trellises on the back porch, perfect rows of vegetables for canning and freezing were planted, both for our family and for neighbors in need when there was abundance. Standing behind the small garden was the farm. It extended alongside the highway that ran beside the left side of the house. The crops stretched toward the horizon and out of sight, interrupted only by the leaning of an old barn, the rise of a tin silo, or the deliberate movement of a John Deere tractor.
But those days were long gone. That was a time when everything seemed to be about life and living. These past few decades, the earth hadn’t been tilled or loved. No planting, no praying for rain, no harvesting. Nothing to show for what had been except the gray of the packed soil and an occasional twig rising up from out of the ground, a remnant of the last crop. Of what my great-grandparents had built, only the big house remained and it was a part of the remnant of what had at one time been a thriving farm in Cottonwood, Georgia.
I blinked several times and brushed away those memories of life. There was too much heartache in the moment to allow myself to remain within them. Now was a time to reflect on death and dying. I could sit here and commiserate, and no one would be the wiser as to the depths I was falling.

What readers are saying about Things Left Unspoken

“What a lovely and deeply moving story Eva Marie Everson offers us in Things Left Unspoken. Her beautiful prose is a gateway into a world of small towns, family secrets and lost loves, with places and characters so real, you forget you’re reading fiction. In fact, I didn’t just read this story, I lived it! And I won’t soon forget the treasures gathered on the journey.”
—Ann Tatlock, award-winning author of The Returning

“In Things Left Unspoken, we are granted a front row seat to a generational love story that unfolds like a rare flower, filling our senses with wonder and imparting truth that when love is the foundation, anything can be restored.” —Allison Bottke, author of A Stitch in Time

“A true southern novel from a true southern novelist. Things Left Unspoken is rich with humor and love.” —DiAnn Mills, author of Breach of Trust

“What a fine, fine book, full of insight, wonderful characters, and complex situations. Southern in the best tradition. A thoughtful discussion of what real love is and what we do because we love.”
—Gayle Roper, author of Fatal Deduction

“Everson writes from the heart of the South. In Things Left Unspoken, she wonderfully portrays the intricacies of small town families with their darkest secrets and deepest bonds. From the first line, she engages the reader in Jo-Lynn’s quest for a place to belong by gently unraveling a tale of tragic history, enduring love, and unexpected intrigue. This is a splendid book by one of the South’s best contemporary authors.”
—Ramona Richards, author of The Taking of Carly Bradford and The Face of Deceit

“Everson delivers a story that is powerful, heart wrenching, and thought-provoking. It is a story of restoration, not only of a house and town, but of innermost parts of a human being.”
—Yvonne Lehman, author, founder of Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference