Enjoy Regencies? Regina Scott does them well indeed. This is a great series and I’m sure you’ll love each one as I did.
My Rating: 5 stars!
Regina Scott brings her Fortune’s Brides series to an end with this one and I sure did hate to see it end. This one, in my opinion, was the very best! I loved it so much. It’s a Regency, which I love and also a marriage of convenience, which is a favorite as well. There was nothing ‘not’ to like about this book! From the very beginning, I was captivated. As always, populated by great characters and themes. Well done!
*My thanks to the author for a preview copy of this book. The opinions stated here are entirely my own.
About Regina
Regina Scott started writing novels in the third grade. Thankfully for literature as we know it, she didn’t actually sell her first Regency romance novel until she had learned a bit more about writing such as vocabulary, sentence structure, and plot. After numerous short stories and articles in magazines and trade journals, she got serious about her novel writing. The Regency romance The Unflappable Miss Fairchild was her first novel to be published (March 1998). In 2011, she was delighted to move into Christian romance with the publication of The Irresistible Earl. October 2019 will mark her debut for prestigious publisher Revell. Her novels have been translated into Dutch, German, Italian, and Portuguese; and a large number have been issued in hardcover, large print editions. She has twice won the prestigious RT Book Reviews Reviewer’s Choice award for best historical Christian romance of its type, for The Heiress’s Homecoming in 2013 and Would-Be Wilderness Wife in 2015.
Regina Scott and her husband are the parents of two sons. They reside in the Puget Sound area of Washington State on the way to Mt. Rainier and are members of the Church of the Nazarene. Regina Scott is a graduate of the University of Washington. She comes by her writing talent naturally–both her parents were excellent writers in their vocations as teacher and electrical technician. Her mother envisioned the plot for “Sweeter Than Candy,” the novella which was written as a tribute to her.
Regina Scott has learned to fence, driven four-in-hand, dressed as a Regency dandy, and sailed on a tall ship, all in the name of research, of course. Her extensive historical, fantasy, and science fiction costume collection takes up the entire closet in her office.
I am absolutely thrilled to have Amanda Barratt here today to talk to us about her latest novel, My Dearest Dietrich, which talks about Dietrich Bonhoeffer and his fiancé, Maria von Wedemeyer. This is an amazing story, folks, and one that is definitely for the keeper shelf! Let’s welcome Amanda now.
Were you a reader as a child?
I honestly can’t
remember a time when I didn’t thrive on the power of story. Even before I could
read, my mom would take me to the library to check out stacks of books, which
she would then read to me. Usually, it didn’t take more than a couple of days
for us to finish the stacks and return for more! I was reading on my own before
the age of four, and haven’t stopped since. Books and stories have always been
a way for me to process the world around me, to expand my horizons, and grow as
an individual. At around the age of seven or eight, I discovered The Diary of Anne Frank, and was
captivated as I delved into the true story of a girl who endured a tumultuous
and heartbreaking period in history. After reading her diary, I wanted to learn
more about the times in which she lived, and proceeded to read children’s
fiction and nonfiction about the war and the Holocaust. Many years later, as I
wrote the first draft of the novel that became My Dearest Dietrich, I remembered my childhood interest, and how it
sparked the beginnings of a journey of learning and sharing the stories of
courage, hope, and self-sacrifice that emerged out of the depths of such darkness.
Tell us why you decided to write about Bonhoeffer.
I discovered Dietrich
Bonhoeffer through Eric Metaxas’s excellent book Seven Men: And the Secret of Their Greatness. I was deeply moved by
the story of a pastor who, because of his faith, refused to stand by and look
on silently in the face of evil. Yet it wasn’t until I came across a quote from
Love Letters from Cell 92, and
discovered Maria von Wedemeyer that a desire to share this facet of
Bonhoeffer’s life took hold of my heart. I wanted to give readers a fresh
portrayal of Dietrich Bonhoeffer—not only as an author, pastor, theologian, and
spy for the resistance, but as a man who’d fallen passionately in love, who
sacrificed not only his own future as a result of his actions, but a future
with the woman he longed to marry. I see Bonhoeffer as a model we as Christians
can look to today. Though he had flaws and imperfections like all of us, he
earnestly sought the will of God and gave up his own comfort for the sake of
living out costly discipleship.
Can you tell us about your research for this book?
The research for My Dearest
Dietrich was
more in-depth than any project I’ve undertaken before. Not only did I
familiarize myself extensively with World War II Germany, I needed to immerse
myself in Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Maria von Wedemeyer’s lives. Since they were
real individuals, I felt an immense responsibility to stay true to their
essence. I read volumes of letters written by Bonhoeffer, the correspondence
between Dietrich and Maria compiled in the book Love Letters from Cell 92, Bonhoeffer’s sermons and books, and
Bonhoeffer biographies galore! I loved discovering new facets of their lives,
and weaving them throughout the novel.
The book is profound and yet painful to read because we know the ending. How did you get through this process?
With many, many
tears! Though I’ve written emotionally intense stories before, I’ve never wept
along with my characters. With this novel, I wrote the final scenes with tears
in my eyes. Yet the tears I shed were not only those of sorrow, but of hope,
just as the story is one of heartbreak, but also of wholeness. During the time
they had together, Dietrich and Maria cherished the love they shared, but both
of them went on to carry that love with them the rest of their lives, even
though Maria lived on for thirty years after Dietrich. To love anyone, for any
length of time, is a gift. And just as the imprint of a footprint lingers after
the person who made it passed by, so do the imprints of those whose lives have
touched ours remain forever within us.
What do you want readers to take away from this book?
The ways stories can impact the heart are as varied as the individuals
who read them. So I’m not sure I can pinpoint one exact message. But what I
will say is that writing this book and discovering the lives of Dietrich
Bonhoeffer and Maria von Wedemeyer changed me both as an author and as a person
more than any project I’ve written to date. The questions Bonhoeffer and those
in World War II Germany faced are questions we face as Christians today, albeit
on a different level. The church is called to take a Christ-honoring stand on
political and cultural issues, and to accept the personal consequences that may
come with that stand. Bonhoeffer spoke out against the persecution of the Jews
and published a book on the Psalms during a time when the leaders of Nazi
Germany wanted to erase the Old Testament from the Bible. He illegally trained
seminary students in the truth of Scripture until his work was shut down by the
Gestapo. Later, Bonhoeffer took an active role in the conspiracy against Adolf
Hitler. And Maria, despite having lost a father and brother on the battlefield,
took the risk of becoming engaged to Dietrich, though she was aware of his
involvement in activities that could (and eventually did) lead to his arrest.
As it says in James, faith without works is dead. Both Bonhoeffer and Maria
lived out their faith through action during a time when many Christians turned
aside and did nothing. Their radical discipleship both challenged and convicted
me.
Bio: ECPA best-selling author Amanda Barratt fell in love with writing
in grade school when she wrote her first story—a spinoff of Jane Eyre. Now, Amanda writes romantic,
historical fiction, penning stories of beauty and brokenness set against the
backdrop of bygone eras not so very different from our own. Her novel My Dearest Dietrich: A Novel of Dietrich
Bonhoeffer’s Lost Love released from Kregel Publications in June 2019.
She’s also the author of My Heart
Belongs in Niagara Falls, New York: Adele’s Journey, as well as seven
novellas with Barbour Publishing. Two of her novellas have been finalists in
the FHL Reader’s Choice Awards.
Amanda lives in the woods of Michigan with her fabulous family, where
she can be found reading way too many books, plotting her next novel, and
jotting down imaginary travel itineraries for her dream vacation to Europe.
Blurb: A staggering love
illuminating the dark corners of a Nazi prison…
Renowned German pastor
and theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer is famous for his resistance to the Nazi
regime and for his allegiance to God over government. But what few realize is
that the last years of his life also held a love story that rivals any romance
novel.
Maria von Wedemeyer knows
the realities of war. Her beloved father and brother have both been killed on
the battlefield. The last thing this spirited young woman needs is to fall for
a man under constant surveillance by the Gestapo. How can she give another
piece of her heart to a man so likely to share the same final fate? Yet when
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, an old family friend, comes to comfort the von Wedemeyers
after their losses, she discovers that love isn’t always logical.
Dietrich himself has
determined to keep his distance from romantic attachments. There is too much
work to be done for God, and his involvement in the conspiracy is far too
important. But when he encounters a woman whose intelligence and conviction match
his own, he’s unprepared for how easy it is to give away his heart.
With their deep love
comes risk–and neither Dietrich nor Maria is prepared for just how great that
risk soon becomes.
Based
on detailed historical research, this true love story is at once beautiful and
heartrending. My Dearest Dietrich sheds new light on a
world-famous theologian . . . and the woman who changed his life.
‘It was what it all came down to in the end. He wanted to live, to see his parents and marry Maria, but ultimately it wasn’t about him. It was about submitting to the will of One greater than himself, seeking that will more than he sought everything else. Valued anything else.’
How in the world do you start to read a book you know is going to end in tragedy? I could not bear to start for a while because I knew what was going to happen. It was going to break my heart. I have long admired Dietrich Bonhoeffer. He was one of the greatest theologians of the last century and gave his life for Christ. Bonhoeffer refused, in the face of Nazism, to compromise the values of the Bible and of Christ to Hitler’s evil machinations. And he paid with his life. He knew that was a distinct possibility, yet he forged on, knowing that he was following the right path.
Amanda Barratt took on an admirable task when she made the decision to write about Bonhoeffer’s life. And she gave us a deeper look at his life, concentrating on not only his incredible faith and bravery, but his love for his fiancé, Maria von Wedemeyer. The fiancé he would never be blessed to marry, but who he would carry in his heart all the way to the gallows. And Barratt writes this so well, so well indeed, that the reader’s heart just weeps with what they know is to come. Her research is impeccable and she manages to convey such deep emotion that I nearly weep every time I just look at this book. Well done!
And one quote from Bonhoeffer just stirs my soul: ‘Whoever I am, Thou knowest, O God, I am Thine.’ May we all have this view.
*My thanks to the publisher for a copy of this book. The opinions stated here are entirely my own.
New York Times best-selling author Shirlee McCoy loves books. She loves reading them. She loves writing them. She loves sharing them with family, with friends, and with total strangers on airplanes and in doctor’s offices. It’s no surprise that she loves being an author. Her first book was published in 2004. Since then, she’s written more than 45 novels. Her books have appeared on the New York Times, Publisher’s Weekly, and USA Today bestsellers lists.
Of course, her love for books pales in comparison with her love for family. When she’s not writing, she’s homeschooling her two youngest children and spending time with the people she cares about most. Her books are a reflection of her passion for relationships and community. An advocate for adoption and a firm believer in the power of faith, love, and compassion, Shirlee writes books that explore the dynamics between siblings, parents, children, and friends.
‘I spent nine years living in a graveyard of dead dreams,
pretending it was Cinderella’s castle. If that’s not sad enough to cry over, I
don’t know what it.’
I only discovered Shirlee McCoy’s books recently and now I get the pleasure of
reading a lot of them without waiting for new releases. The lady knows how to
write inspirational suspense well. I loved this from page one. She engages the
reader immediately and our interest is held throughout the book. Very well done!
Jody Hedlund is the author of over twenty historicals for both adults and teens and is the winner of numerous awards including the Christy, Carol, and Christian Book Award.
Jody lives in central Michigan with her husband, five busy children, and five spoiled cats. Although Jody prefers to experience daring and dangerous adventures through her characters rather than in real life, she’s learned that a calm existence is simply not meant to be (at least in this phase of her life!).
When she’s not penning another of her page-turning stories, she loves to spend her time reading, especially when it also involves consuming coffee and chocolate.
My Rating: 4 stars
‘Are you seeking His leading or are you running away from it?
Jody Hedlund once again brings us a story straight from history with A
Reluctant Bride. Mercy Wilkins goes from living in the poorest slums of London
to boarding a bride ship, although she thinks she is going to British Columbia
to find a job. She hopes to some day send for her sister, who is slaving at the
work house.
Joseph Colville, a titled lord, but trained as a doctor, has agreed to serve as
ship’s surgeon, and requests Mercy’s aid in helping him with the job. Soon they
both begin to feel an attraction towards each other, but fight it because they
are miles apart in their stations in life. However, obstacles are meant to be
overcome. Aren’t they?
Hedlund is wonderful at historical fiction and once again proves that she has a
gift for creating stories crafted from actual historical events. Mercy and
Joseph’s story is mesmerizing and I recommend it very much.
*My thanks to Bethany House Publishers for a copy of this book. The opinions
stated here are entirely my own.
After growing up in California, Karen moved to Texas to attend
Abilene Christian University where she earned bachelor and master’s degrees in
Psychology. It was also there that she met and married her own Texas hero. He
roped her in good, for she has lived in Texas ever since. In fact, she fell so
in love with this rugged land of sweeping sunsets and enduring pioneer spirit,
that she incorporates it into the pages of her novels, setting her stories in
the small towns of a state that burgeoned into greatness in the mid- to
late1800s.
A life-long bookworm, Karen is living her dream by writing
novels. Her books have consistently hit bestseller lists and have garnered
awards such as the ACFW Carol Award, the Holt Medallion, and the Inspirational
Reader’s Choice Award. In addition, she is a multiple RITA and National
Reader’s Choice finalist. Karen is also a sought-after speaker
for national writing conferences and regional workshops.
Karen’s favorite aspect of her writing life is hearing from readers. Nothing encourages her heart more. She’d love to hear from you. You can contact her here.
My Rating:
5 stars!
‘While I believe in prayer and utilize that weapon every day, when one faces Goliath, it’s best to have a rock in the sling. And he was the rock she planned to have on hand.’
Karen Witemeyer brings us another novel in her Patchwork Family series and it’s the best of the series in my opinion. In fact, I think it’s just my favorite of all her work!
Zacharias Hamilton is free now to live his life the way he sees fit. His adopted brother and sister are now both married and on their own and he settles down in the town of Honey Grove, Texas to live out his bachelorhood in peace. Until one day the sweet baker in town comes to his place of work and hands him a contract for marriage. She needs a man’s name to put on the deed of her bakery so the town won’t close her down. And he’s her first choice. What? Zach immediately says no, yet he begins to rethink this, even though he knows Abigail Kemp only has a marriage of convenience in mine. He doesn’t.
They marry but threats to her bakery continue and even her sister seems to have trouble surrounding her. Zach is not one to let those under his protection suffer, so he decides that his wife and sister in law need a strong man to watch after them. Soon, however, Abigail begins to think maybe this man means more to her than just a way to keep her bakery and she thinks she wants his heart.
I adored this book! Witemeyer’s wit is such a fresh breath of air on the pages. I’ve watched Zach through the last two books and wished so badly that he had someone to truly love him for who he is. He is a true man of integrity, despite his horrible upbringing and treatment at the hands of those supposed to love him. His light shines through this book from beginning to end. Any woman would be proud to have a husband like Zach Hamilton. And the wonderful spiritual theme sings through all the way: God can make a way where there seems to be no way and He can use what was meant for evil and turn it into good. I’ve seen him do this in my own life. Well done!
*My thanks to Bethany House Publishers and the author for a preview copy of this book. The opinions stated in this review are entirely my own.
‘She’d probably never get
over the sensation that someone was breathing down her neck or staring at her
through a sniper’s scope, seconds away from ending her life.’
Amy Brady is on the run again as once again her
cover is broken. She is in the WITSEC program and never feels safe. Every time
she gets used to one place, she is found by the folks who want her dead at all
costs. She can’t even see her own twin sister. Sam Maldonado is the deputy
marshal tasked with keeping Amy safe and he is determined to do just that. He
never wants to lose someone in his care again. But are his feelings safe?
Jodie Bailey hits the ground running and the
action continues until the very ending. I finished this book in less than 24
hours! The suspense is great, the characters well fleshed out and the spiritual
theme so worthy. We all deal with fear from time to time, but we must trust God
to not let it overwhelm us. Bravo!
*My thanks to the publisher and author for a
preview copy of this book. The opinions expressed here are entirely my own.
Jodie Bailey is the CBA Best-selling author of novels about freedom and the heroes who fight for it. Her second novel, Crossfire, was a RT Reviewers’ Choice Award winner and her contemporary romance Quilted by Christmas received the Selah Award and spent two months on the CBA Bestseller List. Jodie is also a public speaker and teacher who packs her novels with the knowledge she’s gained as an Army wife.
Jodie Bailey grew up in Eastern North Carolina, where she developed a love for golden sand and the Atlantic Ocean. She started writing stories as soon as she learned how to put sentences together, and spent her childhood and teen years making her best friends’ dreams come true on paper.
In college, she met the love of her life–a soldier who rides a Harley and jumps out of airplanes for fun. This prompted a whole lot of moving from place to place, and she had no idea how much those moves would work their way into her stories. For ten years, she pursued her second love, teaching. Now a full-time writer, she still teaches part-time because the kids keep her young and, every once in awhile, she needs some time away from the imaginary characters.
Jodie currently lives in North Carolina with her husband, her daughter, and two dogs who think they rule the world.
‘Staring at death was nothing
new. It was a way of life. A companion Samuel frequently clasped hands with.’
At last! Michelle Griep gives us Samuel
Thatcher’s story in her Bow Street Runners trilogy. When I first met this man
in previous books, I knew he had a story to tell and knew it would be a good
one. I was wrong. It was a great one. When I saw the cover some time back, that
feeling was simply reinforced.
Abigail Gilbert has been betrothed to a
baronet, but must travel a long journey to his ancestral home to marry him. She
is more than ready to leave a family who has no use for her. A family that
can’t even be bothered to give her a manservant to travel with her on a
dangerous journey. And danger does indeed come, in the form of highwaymen.
Captain Samuel Thatcher arrives just in time to
save Abby from said highwaymen. He despises his job and is hoping to retire and
buy land and become a farmer, far away from crime and death. Abby asks him to
escort her on her journey and he agrees only when she offers him a great deal
of money. He can buy his property and retire from pursuing criminals. However,
one of those criminals, the most vicious sort, is after him and nothing will
stop this man from seeing Thatcher die. But Samuel has promised to keep Abby
safe and he intends to keep that promise. He will be tested down to his last
nerve in doing so, though.
Michelle Griep is a huge favorite of mine. Her
books just get devoured here. When I open one and begin to read, I lose track
of time and everything around me until I finish it. But … I want to race toward
the end and I also want to slow down and savor every moment. So….I end up rereading
many passages again and again, highlighting and writing in the margins. Griep
manages somehow to capture each character in so much detail that they feel as
if you’re riding along in the coach with them in the storms, battling the
highwaymen and feeling every emotion in their hearts. And her spiritual themes
are what some might call simple and direct, but they are very, very profound. I
loved every moment of it and now I wish I could read it all over again. Samuel
Thatcher is the epitome of a noble guardian and a mighty fine hero! Highly
recommended.
My thanks to Barbour Publishing for a copy of
this book via Net Galley. All opinions expressed here are entirely my own. No
positive review was expected and no compensation received.
Michelle Griep is an
author, blogger, and occasional super-hero when her cape is clean.
Dare I be so bold as to call myself an author? Being that I’m one of those freaks who attended poetry workshops instead of summer camp during my formative years, yes, I will. While other teens busied themselves throwing parties when their parents weren’t home, I was the nerd holed up in my room with pen and paper.
A Relative
Relatives. Can’t shoot ’em. It’s against
the law, although I bet my husband and four children have been tempted now and
again to put me in their crosshairs. I’m a wife of twenty-something years and
mother of two sons and two daughters. And yes, it’s true…boys are way easier
than girls, unless drama is something you crave.
An Anti-Establishment Rabblerouser
I am one of those library-card wielding,
mini-van driving, let’s-take-a-jaunt-to-the-grocery-store and call it a field
trip kind of homeschoolers. But allow me this disclaimer: I don’t wear denim
jumpers, and I farm out anything related to science or math. Bonus disclaimer:
The last of my nestlings has flown the homeschooling nest, but I continue to
tutor writing and history at a local high school homeschool co-op.
A Princess
No, I’m not currently on medication for
delusions of grandeur. I am a daughter of a King. Seriously. I take the Bible
as inspired truth and that’s what it says (Romans 8:16, 17).
A Boxer Lover
I’m not talking Fruit of the Loom vs.
Hanes. I’m talking stubby-tailed, fuzzy muzzled, bundles of face-licking love.
As the great philosopher Groucho Marx once said, “Outside of a dog, a book is
man’s best friend. Inside of a dog it’s too dark to read.” The current love of
my life is a 60-pound brindle named Miss Ada Clare. Know what Dickens story
that is from?
An Anglophile
What’s
the deal with me and Great Britain? Beats me. I’m as passionate about anything
English as I am about chocolate and java. Oddly enough, I prefer Bronte over
Austen, and if A Sci-Fi Geek
As a matter of fact, that was me squirreled
away in the backseat of the school bus with my nose plastered in a Bradbury
book. Throughout junior high, I escaped classmate alien abductions by reading
Asimov, Vonnegut and Wells. And I’m doggone pleased to be living in the same metro
area as Uncle Hugo’s Science Fiction Bookstore.
A Chef
Sorry, I did not graduate from the Cordon
Bleu. I didn’t even cough up the cash to attend. I am, however, a veteran of
once-a-month cooking, and you can be, too. Also, if you’d like to email
me, I’ll send you my favorite brownie recipe. Just go to my contact page and
gimme a holler.
you’d like to debate the qualities of Typhoo versus PG Tips, feel free to e-mail me.
‘He’s not my God, and
frankly, I can’t understand how He can be yours, after what’s happened to you.’
Dana Mentink kicks off a new series, Roughwater
Ranch Cowboys, with this novel and this one is anything to go by, it’s going to
be great! Mitch Whitehorse retires from the US Marshals after his vile brother
is sentenced to life in prison for capturing and killing women, a true serial
killer. There is nothing good in this man. Then his brother escapes and comes
gunning for Mitch. And the woman he was married to when he was killing women.
Only she had no idea what he was doing. Now Jane also shows up, to warn Mitch,
she says, but he doesn’t believe her. How could she have been married to his
brother and not known he was such a vile and heinous criminal? But now she’s
got a toddler with her, one she has kept secret. And they need protection. Can
Mitch truly look past his brother’s offenses and keep this woman and her son
safe? Even if he doesn’t believe her story?
This book started off with a bang and kept
going throughout. I love Dana’s suspense novels and she outdoes herself with
this one. Truly. The bad guy in this one is truly a vicious person and she
explores the thought that how can God love someone this cruel? A wonderful
novel with a great spiritual theme. And Mentink introduces us to the people
that will be featured in the upcoming series and I am really looking forward to
them each having their own book! Well done!
*My thanks to the author for a preview copy of
this book. All opinions stated here are entirely my own.
Dana Mentink lives in California where the weather is golden and
the cheese is divine. Her family includes two teen girls (affectionately
nicknamed Yogi and Boo Boo.) Papa Bear is retired from the fire department and
he met Dana doing a dinner theater production of The Velveteen Rabbit.
Ironically, their parts were husband and wife.
Dana is an American Christian Fiction Writers Book of the Year
finalist for romantic suspense and a two time ACFW Carol Award winner. Her
suspense novel, Betrayal in the Badlands, earned a Romantic Times Reviewer’s
Choice Award. She is honored to write for Harlequin’s Love Inspired, Harlequin
Heartwarming, and Harvest House Publishers. Besides writing, she busies herself
teaching third grade. Mostly, she loves to be home with Papa Bear, Yogi, Boo
Boo, a dog with social anxiety problems, a chubby box turtle and a feisty
parakeet.
Awards
2015
Heart of Excellence Finalist for Return to Pelican Inn
Hello! Today I am
thrilled to have as a guest on my blog, author Lori Benton. Lori has graciously offered to give away a
signed copy of her upcoming novel, The King’s Mercy, to one commenter
today. More later on how you can get
your name in the hat for that. For now,
let’s settle in and talk to Lori.
I know you grew up near the Appalachian Mountains. How was it growing up so near to all this wonderful history?
To be honest I wasn’t very interested in history as a kid. I grew
up with my maternal grandparents as well as my parents living in our home and
knew our family had lived and farmed in southern Virginia for many generations;
I’d visited those farms. Now and then we took relatives to see historic places
like George Washington’s home, Mount Vernon. We had friends who participated in
Civil War reenactments and sometimes we attended those (there was a lot to do
about Mary Surratt, hung for involvement in President Lincoln’s assassination,
in my hometown where her old tavern stood), but by and large my focus, creative
and otherwise, was elsewhere—outdoors in the woods and hills with the critters
(I studied art in school and briefly worked as a wildlife artist). I had to
move 3000 miles away to Oregon before I became keenly interested in Colonial
American history. How inconvenient of me! At least the landscape had captured
my attention as a child. I took away the bone-deep memories of how the eastern
landscape—mountains, piedmont, and coast—feels, smells, and looks in every
season.
How did you get into writing?
I blame it on my best friend in the third grade. Without any
warning at all she wrote a story and showed it to me. It was a lightbulb
moment. Though already an avid reader, I guess it hadn’t occurred to me that I
could write my own story—about
anything I wanted. I promptly did so. I still have that story; it’s called Yellow Flower and the Wild Mustang,
about a Native American girl who finds a wounded horse, heals it, and rides it
in a race and beats the boys!
While I wrote in fits and starts after that, it wasn’t until I was
in my early twenties, married and anticipating moving west, that I got serious
enough about writing to start thinking about publication. This was 1991, before
I had a computer or there was email and the internet. I went about it the old
fashioned way: I started writing a novel like those I enjoyed reading at the
time, realizing I’d figure out how to do it as I went along. Eventually I
discovered there were things like writing craft books and writing conferences.
I met other writers. I joined a critique group. The internet came along. I
frequented writers’ forums, other writer’s blogs, and those of editors and
agents.
Now everything a fledgling writer needs to know about the craft of
writing and the business of publication is at her fingertips. It couldn’t be an
easier time to learn.
How do you get your ideas for books?
Ideas are everywhere. I get them watching films and TV, on long
road trips behind the wheel, while hiking, listening to music, during Bible
study, and reading other novels. But most often these days I get ideas while
I’m researching a subject for a book I’m already writing. If it’s a really good
book on the subject, rich with detail and historical accounts of interesting
individuals, I probably won’t escape its pages without three or four more ideas
for characters or situations that might one day, with enough simmering, become
the kernel of a novel, making themselves known. As James Alexander Thom (author
of Follow the River) states in his
book The Art and Craft of Writing
Historical Fiction, “The past is where we get the raw material we use to
make the stories by which we earn our bread. The raw material is already there,
inexhaustible. We pick bygone time up by the handfuls and, like clay, see if it
feels right and then form it into stories about the past.”
I have seen some of your photography and it is gorgeous! Tell us how you came to be interested in photography.
Thank you! A few years ago I met a landscape photographer and
learned several things right quick. One, I can edit a digital photo after I’ve
taken it (the art college major in me rejoiced). And two, there’s this online
platform called Instagram, where I can post my photos and other people can see,
like, and comment on them. Who knew? J I was instantly
hooked.
You are an explorer and you and your husband love to explore the Oregon wilderness. What is the most favorite place you have visited?
The Pacific Northwest is awesome and majestic and beautifully
breathtaking in so many different ways, coast, mountains, and high desert. But
my favorite places tend to be National Parks. There are many I’ve yet to visit,
but Mount Rainier in Washington, Crater Lake in Oregon, Glacier in Montana, and
Yosemite in California are at the top of my favorites list.
My favorite book of yours is Many Sparrows, just loved it. How much research, if any, do you do for your books?
Oh, so very much. I never stop researching. It’s a lifestyle. I
read dozens of books for each novel I write, watch YouTube videos, explore the
setting via Google Earth, talk to people who know more about the subjects I’m
writing about than I do, and every now and then I travel to the places my
novels are set—as was the case for Many
Sparrows. I’m so glad you loved that
one.
Do you have a favorite of all your books and why?
That’s harder to answer
than my favorite place to photograph or explore! No sooner can I choose one
than I think of a reason another one should be my favorite. Most often the book
I’ve most recently finished feels
like my favorite because the characters, themes, setting, and the emotional arc
of the novel are all very fresh in my mind. Right now that’s The King’s Mercy.
Tell us a little about your new book, The King’s Mercy.
Set in the Colony of North Carolina in the 1740s, The King’s Mercy explores the meaning of
freedom from multiple perspectives: an imprisoned and exiled Scottish rebel; a
blacksmith crippled by a devastating injury; a Cherokee youth who breaks with
tradition; a plantation mistress caught in a dehumanizing system; the men and
women her stepfather enslaves; a master with his hope set on earthly gain; a
young man bound by hate and bitterness; and an itinerant preacher willing to
become a slave to see the kingdom of God expand. Each one’s path to freedom is
unique, but each must make make a choice. Obedience or willfulness. Trust or
despair. Mercy or malice.
What do you hope readers will take away from this story?
Something I’ve discovered about celebrating the grace and redemptive power of Jesus Christ in the form of story is that while I’ve had my conversation with the Lord about these characters and themes, after the book is published it becomes the reader’s turn. God will speak to each heart something unique. I love that! Whatever that is for each reader, my hope is that they’re drawn closer to the Lord through Joanna and Alex’s story, and that they turn that last page of The King’s Mercy more in love with our merciful Jesus than when they began.
Lori Benton was raised east of the Appalachian Mountains,
surrounded by early American history going back three hundred years. Her novels
transport readers to the eighteenth century, where she brings to life the
Colonial and early Federal periods of American history. When she isn’t writing,
reading, or researching, Lori enjoys exploring and photographing the Oregon
wilderness with her husband. She is the author of Burning Sky, recipient
of three Christy Awards, The Pursuit of Tamsen Littlejohn; Christy
nominee The Wood’s Edge; A Flight of Arrows; and Many Sparrows.
MY REVIEW
My Rating: 5 Stars!
‘There isna mercy to be
granted, by king or God. He was all but certain no God cared enough to grant
it.’
Alastair MacKinnon left God on the battlefield
of Culloden and hasn’t had need of Him since. Alex is taken captive and granted
the king’s mercy, but it’s no mercy to him. Sold as an indentured servant for
seven years in NC’s colony near Cape Fear, Alex knows no mercy as far as he is
concerned. Alex is to be the new blacksmith at Severn, a vast property with a
multitude of slaves, a practice he finds deplorable. Owner Edmund Carey, and
his stepdaughter Joanna are kind to Alex but the overseer, Phineas Reeves, rubs
him the wrong way and Alex can’t help but feel something is amiss with the man.
An old preacher, Reverend Pauling, known to the Careys, speaks a word over Alex
that he has no desire to hear and it is one of the most powerful statements in
the book: ‘Almighty God has allowed you, by whatever series of events and
decisions brought you to be in this place…if you will allow it, there will be
good come of it.’ Turns out to be a most prophetic utterance.
Events happen which cause Alex great pain and
he must forge another path for himself, both physically and spiritually. But
will others suffer because Alex doesn’t take the reverend’s words seriously?
Reading a novel by Lori Benton is somewhat akin
to sitting down at a most anticipated meal with all your favorite dishes. You
begin to eat and each bite is more delectable than the last. That’s the way it
was with the book: the more I read, the more I loved the book. Benton’s
evocative prose swells beautifully with each description, adding many layers to
the story, increasing its value to this reader. Her descriptions of everything
are vivid and fully exquisite beyond imagining. My heart swelled just reading
them. I finished this book with tears of joy washing my face. I thank God for
the blessing of these words. Books like this surely cause me to thank God for
authors who are obedient to the call of God on their lives to write these
words. A true blessing. Bravo! I very highly recommend this book.
*My thanks to the publisher for a preview copy
of this book. The opinions stated here are entirely my own.
Publisher: Waterbrook
Publication Date: June 4, 2019
So who is ready for a giveaway? Here’s how to get your name in the hat to
win this wonderful book.
You must leave a comment on this blog post. You must also leave your email in a non-spammy format like (susan at yahoo dot com) The contest runs from May 31st to June 7th. Sorry, but due to mailing costs, the contest is only open to US residents in the 48 contiguous states. A winner will be chosen and I will contact you for your mailing address. Good luck to you all!
‘He’d talk to the devil himself if that’s what it took to make
sense of all this.’
Robin Caroll brings us the conclusion to her Darkwater Inn series and she truly
brings it! Well done!
Readers have been hanging on since the first book to see who Addy chooses: Beau
or Dimitri. Well, I’m not telling. (smile)
The Darkwater Inn has had its share of issues in the last year and they’re not
going to stop with this book. The biggest ever: renovation is going on and a
skeleton is found behind a wall. Uh oh. What in the world is going on now?
There are nefarious things afoot in New Orleans and in the Darkwater. It’s up
to Beau and his partner, Marcel, who I really liked in this series, to discover
the culprit. Beau, who is so in love with Addy and desperately wants her to
choose him. And Dimitri, who wants the same thing. No more of that. There is a
great mystery here and one based on an actual serial killer. But this serial
killer was on the loose and creating murder and mayhem in 1918! What is going
on now? Even Addy’s father is not safe.
I loved this book. The mystery was absolutely wonderful and creepy at times.
Caroll is at her very best here and I thoroughly enjoyed every minute and she
has brought the series to a very satisfying conclusion. I can’t wait to see
what she has for us next. Highly recommended.
*Thanks to the author for a preview copy of this book. The opinions expressed
here are entirely my own.
Robin Caroll grew up in Louisiana with her nose in a book.
She still has the complete Trixie Belden series, and her love for mysteries
and suspense has only increased with her age.
Robin’s passion has always been to tell stories
to entertain others and come alongside them on their faith journey—aspects
Robin weaves into each of her published novels.
Best-selling author of thirty-plus novels, ROBIN
CAROLL writes Southern stories of mystery and suspense, with a hint of romance
to entertain readers. Her books have been recognized in several awards,
including the Carol Award, HOLT Medallion, Daphne du Maurier, RT Reviewer’s
Choice Award, and more.
When she isn’t writing, Robin spends quality
time with her husband of nearly three decades, her three beautiful daughters
and two handsome grandsons, and their character-filled pets at home in the
South.
Robin serves the writing community as
Executive/Conference Director for ACFW.