Tuesday, June 9, 2020

About the Book

Book:  This Wandering Heart
Author: Janine Rosche
Genre: Contemporary Inspirational Romance
Release Date: May 5, 2020
In the first entry in the Madison River Romance series, Keira Knudsen gets the traveling opportunity of a lifetime, but when she reunites with her first love, Robbie, she learns that even a wandering heart needs a home….
No one in the quaint town of West Yellowstone, Montana, knows that unassuming geography teacher Keira Knudsen moonlights as sensational travel blogger Kat Wanderfull. No one, that is, except for her first love, Robbie Matthews, who has just discovered the woman he is falling for online is the same one that broke his heart five years ago.
But Robbie has another problem: the mother of his daughter, Anabelle, has resurfaced after a three-year absence determined to rip Anabelle away from him. Robbie needs a steady paycheck for a chance at custody, and now, on the eve of a grand adventure that could give Keira a chance to flee her old, troubled life once and for all, she is in need of assistance.
With so much broken trust between them, Keira and Robbie must keep an arms-length away to make this partnership work. But the more time they spend together, exploring majestic places and sharing new experiences, the closer they get–until their secrets and dreams threaten to cost them everything.


Click here to get your copy!
MY REVIEW
I don’t think I have been more invested in two characters before meeting  Keira and Robbie. They have a long history together which the author shares with grace and love. Keira is a carefree person who is afraid to put down roots. Her childhood was tainted with abuse. I can understand her need to be independent because all her life she has had this dream that never went away. I loved her other persona and all the thrills she had traveling to places with photos that capture her thirst for life. The more I got to know Keira the more I  fell in love with her sweet disposition. 
Robbie is a wonderful  father to his adorable daughter Annabelle. Raising her alone has given him a purpose to be the best person he can be. I loved reading how family oriented he was. Robbie has loved Keira since forever and seeing her again brings back strong emotions. The author unwraps their relationship slowly as we glimpse into their struggle to be together. Keira is afraid of commitment and Robbie still feels the pain when she walked away from him years ago.  Or perhaps they both struggle with pride and can’t get past asking for forgiveness from each other. 
 I love stories about second chances. It gives hope to a situation that seems impossible, it allows forgiveness to take place and it  removes doubt and past sins to be forgotten. There is so much emotion written in this story that I could feel when Keira felt lost or Robbie wanting to tell Keira that he never stopped loving her. I love the unexpected twists which added to the story of two people finding their way back to each other. The faith element in the story is good and I really liked how Robbie always followed God’s direction. This book will remind you that when you find love, the past is forgotten. There is now a new beginning with hope, joy and above all unconditional love. 
“That’s the thing about grace. It’s most appreciated by the ones who deserve it the least.”   

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

About the Author

Prone to wander, Janine Rosche finds as much comfort on the open road as she does at home. This longing to chase adventure, behold splendor, and experience redemption is woven into her Madison River Romance series. When she isn’t writing or traveling, she teaches family life education courses to college students, takes too many pictures of her sleeping dogs, and embarrasses her four children and husband with boy band serenades.



More from Janine

Do you remember that weird kid who would sit at their desk in elementary school and stare into space for minutes at a time? If you don’t, then chances are, you were that weird kid. Welcome to the club—you know, the club for people who believe that what could be is worth imagining.

“If you imagine it, then it will never happen,” my junior high friends said.

“You’re setting yourself up for disappointment,” my high school mentor advised.

“Close your mouth, or you’ll catch a fly,” my second grade teacher warned.

While that last one scared me into buttoning my lips while staring blankly at the chalkboard, those early naysayers didn’t keep me from daydreaming. I couldn’t help it. I loved imagining a world far more exciting, awe-inspiring, and romantic than my own. Even when I’d finish books or movies, I would happily dream myself into the story where courage abounds and heroes are truly larger-than-life.

Of course, through the years, disappointment did come, and so did reality. In love, my heart was broken. In my career aspirations, my confidence was shattered. My daydreams almost stopped entirely.

People often ask me if it was a lifelong dream of mine to publish a book. The answer to that is yes…and no. It had been once, but holding on too tightly to that while also believing it was too far out of reach for someone like me created such an overwhelming ache in my heart. And so, I buried it. However, that dream, along with the storylines and characters in my mind weren’t content to stay buried. For eight years they awakened me at night and distracted me by day, until finally, I chose to spit out the words in a blank spiral notebook. I’d hoped that by writing down the story that had festered, I’d finally have peace, but then the next story came, and the next.

“I’ve learned that courage isn’t something we’re born with. It’s a choice.” That line of dialogue comes from a key moment in my debut novel, This Wandering Heart. In the story, my heroine, Keira, rises above an awful childhood to live a life of adventure. The line was quite autobiographical. I could have chosen to keep believing the naysayers. That would have been easy. It took no courage–no risk at all—to believe the lies, the criticism, and the discouragingly low probability statistics of publication.

Pursuing your dream, though, requires a lot of courage. Courage to be laughed at, to fail, to be rejected. Courage to be terrible at this new thing you’re trying. Certainly more courage than I carried in my spirit. So I prayed. I climbed onto that metaphorical rope dangling from the hand of God, and swung.

It was a choice. To be completely honest, it still is a choice to believe these daydreams of mine. Each day, it takes faith to chase this dream of writing novels and to imagine what could be. I guess you could say that I’ve found my way into the story after all. And it truly is exciting, awe-inspiring, and—dare I say?—romantic.

I’m honored to have you all join me on this incredible journey! But it’s not all about me. What daydream are you tempted to believe in your life?


Everyone is eligible to receive a free subscription to the Love Wander Read Journal, a quarterly digital magazine from Janine Rosche that aims to provide inspiration for a life well-lived. Link: http://janinerosche.com/the-love-wander-read-journal/

Giveaway

To celebrate her tour, Janine is giving away the grand prize package of a set of GelConnie leather bracelets, a 2020 National Geographic Road Atlas, and a $50 Visa gift card!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.

6 comments:

  1. This sounds like a really great read.

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  2. Thanks for taking time to share your book with us and it's always a pleasure in our family to learn about a new one.

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  3. Deana, this brought tears to my eyes! Thank you!

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  4. Okay, writing a travel blog would be a pretty epic job! At least, if you got to go to all the places. A daydream I'd like to believe in?? No idea. I'd have to think about it.

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