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Friday, August 6, 2021


 


CATCH ME IF YOU CAN BY CAROLE BROWN 

The big cat sat on the oversized rock, ears pointed toward the sky, every muscle taut, every sense at the ready. “S-s-shut up and f-f-forget it! You’ve s-s-seen nothing and know nothing! I won’t warn you again. G-g-got it?”His head swiveled, his ears twitching as if catching the hint of threat in the whisper. A soft hiss slid from his open mouth and reinforced the overtone of evil pressing in upon the scene… Coaxed into finding the animal killer at Jamieson’s Outfitters, Tara Layne, with her sidekick, Boet, is welcomed by a threatening whisper and the unfriendly eyes of a gruff manager. Within hours, lies and dark secrets are slithering all over the campground. Intermingled with her search, Tara deals with her own buried secrets when a strange old Native American probes into the recesses of her heart forcing her to face her bitter feelings. And Wesley Clarke, manager/guide, both interesting and frustrating, holds an attraction for Tara that is primitive and exasperating.When Tara gets too close, she finds herself—and Boet—the target of someone who’s determined to keep from getting caught. His theme: Run as fast as you can, you can’t catch me.The question: Can Tara run fast enough to catch this real-life gingerbread boy before he decides to get rid of her and Boet.


Carole Brown's debut novel, The Redemption of Caralynne Hayman, is a 2015 Book of the Year in General Fiction from Christian Small Publishers, an RWA Oklahoma International Digital Award 2nd place winner, a Clash of the Titles top three finalists, a Selah Award finalist in debut novels, and a semi-finalist in the Genesis contest. 

Besides being a member and active participant of many writing groups, she enjoys mentoring beginning writers. She loves to weave suspense and tough topics into her books, along with a touch of romance and whimsy and is always on the lookout for outstanding titles and catchy ideas. She and her husband have ministered and counseled across the country. Together, they enjoy their grandsons, traveling, gardening, good food, the simple life, and did she mention their grandsons? 

I'd love to connect with readers at: 

Personal blog: http://sunnebnkwrtr.blogspot.com/ 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CaroleBrown.author

FB Fan Page: https://www.facebook.com/groups/183457429657732/ 

Amazon Author Page: https://amzn.to/38Ukljnhttps://amzn.to/38Ukljn

BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/carole-brown

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/browncarole212/?hl=en

Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/sunnywrtr/boards/

Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/5237997-carole-brown


MY REVIEW

Wow!! This story is definitely the author’s best to date. It is somewhat mysterious, a bit creepy but oh so intriguing. I loved Tara and her determination to find out who was killing animals on a place her friend owns. The setting is in the  woods where wild animals abound. They are free to roam but someone is doing something sinister to them. Tara is there to investigate but she senses a bit of tension among the workers. Someone knows something and I couldn’t wait to turn the  pages to find out what was going on. 

I felt shivers go down the back of my neck as Tara faces danger as clues are found. I need to stop here for a minute and mention a very important part of this story, Tara has an unusual partner who is intelligent and keeps close to Tara. I have never heard of a Savannah cat before so I looked it up. They are beautiful animals with an instinct to be on the go a lot. Boet’s  presence in the story is fascinating and I loved how important this beautiful animal is to Tara. 

Whoever is behind all the killings is in power and thrives on it. Their agenda is not quite defined yet but I anticipated their every move. The author is very polished in keeping readers guessing and I decided I needed to bring out my journal to take notes in. I had started a list of suspects in my head, but now they needed to be on paper so I could play detective. 

The action really picks up as more unexplained accidents happen and mysterious notes start showing up to scare a certain someone away. I was by this time on the edge of my seat. Can Tara track down the killer before another senseless animal is killed? The author has a few surprises in store for us that shocked me. Did I figure out who the guilty person was?  No but that just shows me how good she is at keeping readers in suspense til the very end. I don’t think I will ever look at a gingerbread man the same again. 

I received a copy of this book from the author and Celebrate Lit. The review is my own opinion. 












 




 

About the Book

Book: Song of Grace

Author: The Mosaic Collection

Genre: Christian Contemporary

Release date: July 7, 2021

 

How amazing is grace? Eight short stories trace the path of grace through the lines of a well-known hymn that was birthed in tragedy.

These characters each desperately seek a variety of prizes: relationships, hope, fame and fortune, security, eternal youth. All of them struggle through trials and troubles to stumble upon the same amazing answer.

 

Click here to get your copy!

 

About the Authors

Johnnie (3)Johnnie Alexander

Johnnie Alexander creates characters you want to meet and imagines stories you won’t forget. Her award-winning debut novel, Where Treasure Hides(Tyndale), is a CBA bestseller. She writes contemporaries, historicals, and cozy mysteries, serves on the executive board of Serious Writer, Inc., co-hosts an online show called Writers Chat, and interviews inspirational authors for Novelists Unwind. She also teaches at writers conferences and for Serious Writer Academy. Johnnie lives in Oklahoma with Griff, her happy-go-lucky collie, and Rugby, her raccoon-treeing papillon.

 

 

 

Eleanor BertinEleanor

In a fit of optimism at age eleven, ELEANOR BERTIN began her first novel by numbering a stack of 100 pages. Two of them got filled with words. Lifelines, her first completed novel, was published in 2016, followed by Pall of Silence in 2017, a memoir about her late son Paul.

Eleanor grew up on a Manitoba farm, spent 20 years in cities and towns, and in the past 16 years has come full circle to embrace country life again. She lives with her husband and youngest son, Timothy, amidst the ongoing renovation of a century home in central Alberta where she reads, writes, sweeps up construction rubble and blogs about a sometimes elusive contentment at jewelofcontentment.wordpress.com.

 

Sara (1)Sara Davison

Sara Davison is the author of three romantic suspense series, The Seven Trilogy, The Night Guardians, and The Rose Tattoo Trilogy. She has been a finalist for ten national writing awards, including Best New Canadian Christian author, a Carol, a Selah, and two Daphne du Maurier Awards for Excellence in Mystery/Suspense. She is a Word and Cascade Award winner. She currently resides in Ontario, Canada with her husband Michael and their three children, all of whom she (literally) looks up to. Get to know Sara better at www.saradavison.org and @sarajdavison.

 

 

 

Deb ElkinkDeb

Deb Elkink lives in a cottage beside a babbling creek in rural Alberta, Canada, home base for exotic travels with her husband. She published her first bits of writing after graduating university, then married and spent twenty years as a homeschooling mom and ranch wife—rounding up cattle, earning her private pilot’s license, and cooking for huge branding crews. An MA in Theology led to publication of a literary study on the fiction of G.K. Chesterton (Roots and Branches), prepared her as an academic editor, and jettisoned her into her long-held dream of writing literary fiction with a theological twist. Her publications so far include multiple short stories as well as two award-winning novels (The Third Grace and The Red Journal). 

 

ChautonaChautona Havig

Author of the bestselling Aggie and Past Forward series, Chautona Havig lives in an oxymoron, escapes into imaginary worlds that look startlingly similar to ours and writes the stories that emerge. An irrepressible optimist, Chautona sees everything through a kaleidoscope of It’s a Wonderful Lifesprinkled with fairy tales. Find her at chautona.com and say howdy—if you can remember how to spell her name.

 

 

 

Angela D. MeyerAngela

ANGELA D. MEYER writes fiction that showcases God’s ability to redeem and restore the brokenness in our lives. She is the author of This Side of YesterdayThe Jukebox Cafe (a part of Hope is Born: A Mosaic Christmas Anthology) and the Applewood Hill series. Angela is a member of American Christian Fiction Authors and has served on the leadership team of her local writers’ group, Wordsowers. Angela currently lives in NE with her husband. They have two children, both of whom they homeschooled and graduated. Lucy, a green eyed, orange tabby who loves popcorn rounds out their family. Angela enjoys sunrises and sunsets, the ocean when she gets a chance to visit, and hopes to ride in a hot air balloon someday.

 

StacyStacy Monson

Stacy Monson is the award-winning author of The Chain of Lakes series, including Shattered Image, Dance of Grace, and The Color of Truth, as well as Open Circle. Her stories reveal an extraordinary God at work in ordinary life. Residing in the Twin Cities, she is the wife of a newly-retired juggling, unicycling physical education teacher, a proud mom, and doting grandma.

 

 

 

 

Candace WestCandace (4)

Candace West was born in the Mississippi delta but grew up in small-town Arkansas. She is a graduate of the University of Arkansas at Monticello. Ever since the age of twelve, she dreamed of writing inspirational fiction. Over the years, she has published short stories as well as poems in various magazines. By weaving entertaining, page-turning stories, she hopes to share the Gospel and encourage her readers.

 

 

 

 

 

More from The Mosaic Authors

It’s Never Too Late for a Heart Transformation… and Great Books

He stood at the pulpit, chains hanging from his wrists, one fist raised to the heavens, a pottery jug in the other hand.  With his teeth, he uncorked the jug (still don’t know how he did that) and took a swig of the “alcohol” within, allowing it to slosh over his mouth and onto the floor. Watching as he shouted his defiance to Almighty God, my thirteen-year-old self scooted back a little further in the pew, certain. Skit or no skit… Pastor Phillips was about to get struck by lightning.

In his characteristic style, he burst out laughing, wiped his brow, and stowed the jug under the pulpit.  A grin plastered to his face, he wiped that brow again.  “Almost felt the sizzle of lightning or something.”

See, I thought to myself. I’m not so crazy after all. 

And from there, our beloved pastor went on to tell the story of John Newton’s conversion and how he eventually, after more years in the slave trade, renounced it for the vile nastiness that it is and worked to end it before he died. But one more beautiful thing came out of all of that ugliness—perhaps the most beloved hymn of all time. “Amazing Grace.”

The Mosaic Collection authors have joined for a summer anthology celebrating the joy and beauty found in God’s “Amazing Grace.” Each story in this collection was inspired by a stanza of that grand old hymn.

As one of the authors in the collection, I found myself humming and singing “my verse,” during the weeks before and during writing my offering.  My verse is,

“When we’ve been there ten thousand years,

Bright shining as the sun,

We’ve no less days to sing God’s praise

Than when we’d first begun.”

All four lines of my stanza play into my story, albeit some ambiguously.  From that ten thousand (dollars, not years) to the (desert) sun, to praising God for His goodness all our days, Spines & Leaves tells the story of God changing the goals and desires of three individuals, just like He changed those of John Newton.

As for how Sara used the stanza in her story, Sara says, “My portion of the hymn is the final two lines of the first stanza: I once was lost, but now I’m found. Was blind but now I see. In my story, I’d Like to Thank the Academy, Lizzy Cross travels to the City of Angels to seek fame and fortune. When she gets lost in L.A. and meets a blind man playing ‘Amazing Grace’ on his guitar, she realizes the song could be about them. Or is it possible that the words mean something else entirely?”

Angela says, “My stanza speaks of the joy and peace we gain in heaven, although we have them in full measure in this life. Jillian’s Refuge is about a young woman discovering these amazing gifts as she journeys through grief and finds healing in an unexpected place.”

Deb says, “In my story, aging expat Dolores, retiring alone in colonial Mexico and agitated over losing her youth, meets up for an afternoon cultural tour with her visiting granddaughter and new baby. Their mother-child vitality forces Dolores to face the fear that drove her from her family and the grace that calls her back to Christian faith.”

Join Stacy Monson, Sara Davison, Deb Elkink, Eleanor Bertin, Johnnie Alexander, Angela Meyer, Candace West Posey, and Chautona Havig as they introduce you to characters and stories that will fill your hearts with God’s grace.

MY REVIEW 

I love books that feature different authors in one collection. Readers get a taste of how authors write and bring together a theme that flows from page to page. I couldn’t wait to read this interesting  book and be filled with joy, hope, compassion and love. I love that each story is based on verses from my mom’s favorite hymn. As I turned each page it made me think of the one thing I admired about my mom. She loved Jesus and was a good pastor’s wife. 

The Sweetest Sound by Stacy Monson

This is a beautiful story of  two young people in love. They make a decision one day that changed their lives. I didn’t like Wendy’s dad at all. The words he called her were horrible and I cringed each time he shouted them out to her. A baby is a precious gift from God and Wendy and Jimmy adore their baby. I loved how the author shows us how difficult it is to do the right thing even when it hurts. The sacrifice this couple  make for their child is sweet. It is a beautiful reminder how Jesus sacrificed for each of us. What a sweet sound I heard as grace was shown to a precious child. 

I’d Like To Thank The Academy by Sara Davison 

Have you ever dreamed  of being famous? Lizzy  has had that ambition all her life. Her trip to Hollywood brings more than she bargained for. I know that feeling of wanting to belong and feeling at home. You wander aimlessly through life waiting for the right place. For Lizzy  she finds acceptance from a man with vision problems. 

Rafe was a wonderful character with wisdom and a heart for others. He makes the story better because of his ability to see a person for who they are rather than judging them by their appearance. I loved how the friendship grew between Lizzy  and Rafe.  It is a great story of finding your way back to God and feeling loved. 

Reconstituted by Deb Elkink 

I really enjoyed this story and the emotional journey the author takes. Dolores has a bitter, angry disposition and seeing her granddaughter was not on her list of excitement for the day. The past has caused Dolores to walk away from her family and seclude herself away from everything she once knew. I thought how sad it was that because she couldn’t forgive she was missing out on living. 

This is definitely a more serious story which I found was helpful with struggles I have had in the past. When you feel like someone has wronged you , you hold on to that bitterness and before you know it you  years have gone pass by. I liked learning about Dolores’s past and why she had  lost touch with her family. The author delivers a great lesson on forgiveness and not having regrets. 

A Portion of Grace by Eleanor Bertin 

Florence will definitely be a character I remember. She has lived a long life and now has memories of her children that she treasures. I loved how she embraced her new friend and started to feel like she  was part of their family. There was a purpose for her to meet Jenna. This young girl was troubled and needed someone she could talk to. 

Even though Florence may not remember her past well, her wisdom is enough to change a young girl’s heart. The transformation in Jenna was wonderful and I know it helped the entire family come back together. I thought the ending was sad but also a beautiful tribute to a woman who loved with her whole heart.

Paper Trail by Johnnie Alexander

What a very unique way to tell a story. At first I was a bit confused but as I turned the page I began to see the story unfold. Twin girls born to a family that I’m sure was exciting. Through snippets of papers, receipts and tickets we can follow these twins lives and see exactly where a tragedy happened. Oh what it must have felt like to lose a child. I can imagine the tears that were shed and soon realize  that the twin left behind had  changed. Her grades drop, she gets in trouble with the law and seems to break away from her parents. 

Losing her twin has taken a great toil on this young girl and I can tell she is trying to find her way back to hope, grace, family and love. We can use our imagination to fill in the gaps of her life but in the end I know she found  her way back home. Her journey was one of overcoming grief, forgiveness and letting go of the past. I loved how the author used this creative way to tell a story with visualization. 

Jillian’s Refuge by Angela D. Meyer

What a beautiful reminder of God’s grace in this story. Jillian was a great character and I understood how much pain she was in. Losing her parents has taken a toll on her. I loved how she ended up at Kate’s place where she finds hope and love. Their relationship was special and I loved how much Kate gives to others. 

The story is a journey through grief and anger. I’m sure we all have lost a loved one at one time. I remember when my brother died I was so angry at God. Like Jillian I didn’t understand why He allowed someone I loved to pass away. It was interesting to see how the bond between Kate and Jillian grew as they helped each other through heartache. I loved this story because it was an honest look at going through the grief process and finding your way back to God.

Forever Mine by Candace West

We  never know what our future holds but we probably all have regrets from our past. Maybe it was a fight you had with a friend or a decision you made that didn’t turn out well that has caused you to have regrets. In this story we find a young woman that was so close to seeing her dream come true when a tragedy changed everything. 

Trixie is a person who has tried so hard to fulfill her dream when a phone call has her going back to her hometown. I admired her giving up everything to take care of her mother. It would be hard to pass up an opportunity that you have worked so hard to achieve. Coming back home Trixie knew she would have to face someone who she never forgot about. 

I liked how the author brought Andrew and Trixie back together to deal with their past. Andrew has many challenges ahead of him, but the most important thing he needs to do is make amends with a very special person. We never know what blessing is waiting for us when we are in the midst of a bad situation. I loved seeing how God opened doors for both Trixie and Andrew while helping them find their way to forgive each other. The story is a great example of grace and trusting God. 

Spines & Leaves by Chautona Havig

I love stories about bookstores and all that goes on behind the scenes to run one. I wasn’t sure where the author was taking us as the story began, but oh my did I find myself thrilled with every word that made this a journey to finding what serving others really means.  Milton may be considered odd to some but to many  he is a blessing. 

His stop at the crowded and overwhelming bookstore on his trip was a challenge. I could sense his heartbeat  a little faster as the ideas started to fill his head. This was the place God  wanted him to be. His creativity is contagious and Mercedes quickly begins to get excited about the new ideas. It’s the perfect place for Milton to develop friendships and save a business. 

The story is very well written and I adored Atticus. What a  smart bird and so well mannered and spoiled. I wanted to say so much more about the story but I don’t want to give anything away. I do know that within this short story the characters found hope, friendship and most of all a reminder that we have something to praise Him for each day. Don’t waste any moment you have, because one day we will have , “one less day here to sing God’s praises.” 

I received a copy of this book from Celebrate Lit. The  review is my own opinion.

Blog Stops

Book Reviews From an Avid Reader, July 26

Rebecca Tews, July 26

Inklings and notions, July 27

For Him and My Family, July 28

Lighthouse Academy Blog, July 29 (Guest Review from Marilyn Ridgway)

deb’s Book Review, July 29

Gina Holder, Author and Blogger, July 30 (Author Interview)

Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, July 30

CarpeDiem, July 31

Ashley’s Clean Book Reviews, July 31

Because I said so — and other adventures in Parenting, August 1

Locks, Hooks and Books, August 2

Mary Hake, August 2

A Modern Day Fairy Tale, August 3

Happily Managing a Household of Boys , August 4

Batya’s Bits, August 4

Splashes of Joy, August 5

Through the Fire Blogs, August 5

Texas Book-aholic, August 6

Library Lady’s Kid Lit, August 6

Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, August 7

Pause for Tales, August 7

Musings of a Sassy Bookish Mama, August 8

Giveaway

To celebrate their tour, the Mosaic Collection Authors are giving away the grand prize package of a $50 Amazon gift card, a paperback copy of the book, and a $10 coupon to Mosaic’s brand new Etsy shop!!

Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.

https://promosimple.com/ps/11032/song-of-grace-celebration-tour-giveaway

Wednesday, August 4, 2021

 

Sojourner Christmas

About the Book

Book:  A Sojourner Christmas

Author: Linda Brooks Davis

Genre: Historical

Release date: March 17, 2021

2020_12-18_#5_2CLBD2020_LidaBrooksDavis_ValleyOfPromise_02_ASojournerChristmas_EBOOK_FINAL20201112 copy 2She relinquished her childhood home. Abandoned her former life. And set off for a faraway valley that’s touted as magical. As an aspiring newspaper reporter, Blossom Evans expects to find plenty of material with which to carve out a career.

But alarming tales about the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas abound. Barely tamed, rugged brush land. Mexican bandits. Wildcats, rattlesnakes, and tarantulas as big around as dinner plates. Where will she find the courage to face—and overcome—such foes, even for her dream career?

The first hint of an answer lies in the sleepy little West Texas town of Winters. An unexpected conflict is brewing, one that could launch a reporter’s career—or crush it before it begins. How will Blossom be lured into the fray? And where will she find the temerity to confront this particular brand of evil? It’s Christmas Eve 1923, and Blossom Evans is about to discover what’s she made of.

 

Click here to get your copy!

 

About the Author

LindaBrooksDavis_profile-removebgLinda Brooks Davis was born and reared on a farm in Raymondville, a small Rio Grande Valley community in the southernmost tip of Texas. She retired in 2008 after forty years as a special educator and administrator and now writes inspirational historical fiction from her home in San Antonio, Texas. Readers may contact Linda through her website, www.lindabrooksdavis.com.

 

More from Linda

Something to Write Home About

 

“People don’t come better than the Pyles,” my mother would often say about her mother Ella’s family. And I believed her.

 

Years ago—1967 to be exact—Mother finally convinced me to put pen to paper and tell the Pyle family tale about their winter of 1923-24 migration from central Oklahoma to the southernmost tip of Texas. In covered wagons. The process turned me into a family history buff.

My mother was our family’s “keeper,” and she passed the moniker to me. Fortunately, I now share her interest in our Pyle ancestors’ backstories. I delight in finding treasures—photos, stories, anecdotes, and documents—from our family tree.

At the present time, I’m going through trunks, bins, and boxes of family mementos that extend into the nineteenth century and even further. Each item sparks dreams of what forebearers’ lives truly might have been. What were their secret longings and loves? What dreams did they withhold from others? What tragedies did they endure, and how did they survive them?

One Pyle dream that became reality was migrating from central Oklahoma to the Lower Rio Grande Valley in the southernmost tip of Texas. They had heard stories about soil so fertile and climate so ideal that the area was called the Magic Valley.

Land developers in the Valley were as busy as bees in citrus orchards, doing all they could to convince folks in the Midwest to buy land in the Texas Magic Valley, and the newcomers came. Among them, my mother’s Pyle clan. In the deep winter of 1923-24, the Pyles sold their land and belongings and acquired 8 covered wagons and the horses to pull them. On December 17, 1923, they headed southward toward their dreams.

On Christmas Eve a week later, the family arrived in Winters, Texas, a windswept community south of Abilene in West Texas where ranchers and farmers populated the countryside. Since the advent of the train and automobile, cross-country travel in covered wagons had become an oddity. And the Pyles did feel a bit odd—especially when someone mistook them for Gypsies and bought the Pyle children Christmas presents.

Fast-forward sixty years. My mother possessed a crusader streak and rarely hesitated before acting on it. Fifty years after the wagon trail adventure, she acted—without hesitation—when a young farm worker told her someone was involved in the drug trade on her land.

Soon she knew the sound of the engine and general description of the car that crept down the dirt road past our house in the dark of night for no apparent reason. Mother, the Super Sleuth, wanted to share the make and license number with the local police, so she and the young farm worker devised a plan.

On the appointed night, the same car inched past our house, around the corner of an adjoining twenty-acre parcel. Mother and her partner headed, stooped and trembling, across a dark field of cotton toward the now distant red taillights of the suspicious car.

“I need to get close enough to find the make of the car and the license number,” Mother said as she drew near the car, which had stopped in the middle of the dirt road. As she raised up, another set of headlights flashed down the road, and she flopped onto the dirt cotton row. But the second set of headlights brightened their hiding place like the noonday sun.

“Follow me,” Super Sleuth whisper-shouted to her compadre. Both tumbled into a drainage ditch that separated the field from the road. Out of sight—but terrifyingly near danger—the pair dug their fingers into the damp soil and pressed their faces into the slimy growth, praying no one would see them. And that no creepy creature would attack.

Several men, some blinding white in the lights and others black as tar in the shadows, met in the space between the two idling cars and made their exchange. Mother peeked above a prickly weed and caught the makes of both vehicles. And she and her partner memorized partial plate numbers.

Thankfully, the drug dealers went their separate ways, leaving Super Sleuth and her partner to make their way back home. In the pitch-black night. Across acres of growth that snatched at their cotton skirts. Amid clusters of swarming insects. And through strips of undeveloped land that harbored rattlesnakes.

Trembling from the adrenalin surge but armed with tidbits of important information, the two piled into Mother’s car and raced to the Sheriff’s Office. She submitted a report about the incident, complete with the cars’ identifying details, and returned home so grateful not to have been discovered that she fell into a deep sleep.

I drew upon these memories for the writing of A Sojourner Christmas. The McFarland clan does, indeed, set out across country in a team of covered wagons as my Pyle relations did. And they pull into Winters, Texas on the twenty-fourth of December 1923, just as my Pyle forebearers did. They were mistaken for Gypsies and were surprised with Christmas presents from the townsfolk, as are the McFarlands.

While in Winters, Blossom Evans entangles herself in a dangerous affair, one that my Super Sleuth mother would have joined if she could. I can imagine Mother and Blossom heading out across a windswept field in pursuit of bootleggers in 1923. Or drug dealers in 1983. Or …

I hope A Sojourner Christmas meets Mother’s heavenly approval. I hope the same for readers.

MY REVIEW 

This is not an easy story to read as it deals with the a subject that still exists today. I appreciate how the author exposed such a group that only has evil in their hearts. The trip that the McFarland’s take by wagon is hard as winter settles in. They find themselves in a town called Winter, Texas. The story focuses on Blossom and her desire to be a newspaper reporter. She is shy and needs a little encouragement at times. I liked how she saw people who needed help and not what the color of their skin was.

It is hard to imagine that during this time period prejudice was going on. The part where Blossom witnesses a crime in action, I was happy to see how she stood up to the men who wanted to harm a couple who were kind and hardworking. We see how  Blossom finds courage and helps the family out. There was a part in the story that was hard to read but the author does a good job of describing it in a way that shows how evil men can be when they are part of the white  supremacy movement. Blossom finds  boldness  as she asked God to help her. The story is short but shows us how important family is and standing up for what is right. 

I received a copy of this book from Celebrate Lit. The review is my own opinion. 


Blog Stops

Inklings and notions, July 24

For Him and My Family, July 25

Mary Hake, July 25

deb’s Book Review, July 26

Lighthouse Academy, July 27 (Guest Review from Marilyn Ridgway)

Library Lady’s Kid Lit, July 27

Locks, Hooks and Books, July 28

Abba’s Prayer Warrior Princess, July 29

Connect in Fiction, July 29

lakesidelivingsite, July 29

Ashley’s Clean Book Reviews, July 30

Connie’s History Classroom, July 31

Pause for Tales, July 31

She Lives To Read, August 1

A Modern Day Fairy Tale, August 2

Musings of a Sassy Bookish Mama, August 3

Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, August 4

Texas Book-aholic, August 5

Happily Managing a Household of Boys, August 5

Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, August 6

Splashes of Joy, August 6

Giveaway

To celebrate her tour, Linda is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Amazon gift card and a copy of the book!!

Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.

https://promosimple.com/ps/11031/a-sojourner-christmas-celebration-tour-giveaway