Category Archives: Lauren Denton

Review: The One You’re With by Lauren K. Denton

Title: The One You’re With by Lauren K. Denton
Publisher: Thomas Nelson
Genre: Contemporary, Women’s Fiction
Length: 368 pages
Book Rating: B+

Complimentary Review Copy Provided by Publisher Through NetGalley

Summary:

Written in Lauren K. Denton’s signature Southern style, The One You’re With tells a story of marriage, choices, and what a good life really looks like.

High-school sweethearts Mac and Edie Swan lead a seemingly picture-perfect life in the sleepy-sweet community of Oak Hill, near Mobile, Alabama. Edie is a respected interior designer, Mac is a beloved pediatrician, and they have two great kids and a historic home on tree-lined Linden Avenue. From the outside, the Swan family is the definition of “the good life.” And life is good—mostly. Until a young woman walks into Mac’s office one day. A young woman whose very existence threatens all Mac and Edie have built and all they think they know about each other.

Nineteen years after a summer apart, with a family and established lives and careers, the past that Mac and Edie thought they left behind has come back to greet them. For the first time, constants in their lives are called into question: their roles as parents, their reputation as upstanding members of the community, and the very foundations of their marriage. As they wade through the upheaval in both their family and professional lives, they must each examine choices they made long ago and chart a new course for their future.

Review:

The One You’re With by Lauren K. Denton is a heartfelt novel about a married couple dealing with unexpected revelations.

Mac and Edie Swan are childhood sweethearts who have been married for seventeen years. The yjuggle the demands of parenting eleven-year-old Thomas and fourteen-year-old Avery with the demands of their respective careers. Mac is a pediatrician who owns his own practice while Edie is an interior designer. Nineteen years earlier, Mac and Edie split up for a summer during college. Mac spent the summer working at a marina and stayed with his best friend Graham Yeager. Edie spent her summer in New York as an intern at a design firm. She and Graham, who is also her friend, exchange letters while also dreaming of opening a business together since he is going to be an architect.  Both Edie and Mac have left that summer behind them, but the past does not stay buried after a stranger walks into their lives and turns everything upside down.

After their lives implode in the present, Edie and Graham work on a project together. As he draws up the plans for a coastal home, she comes up with the interior design. They are a compatible team which revives thoughts of a possible partnership. Edie has been unhappy with her boss but she doe not know if she wants to leave her job. At home, things are tense between her and Mac as they contend with the revelations of a  long-held secret.

While events are unfolding in the present, chapters flashback to the summer Mac and Edie spend apart. Through alternating chapters and points of view, details emerge about what happens in the different cities. Edie revels in the praise of the interior designer she is working with and dreams of her future. She also very excitedly exchanges letters with Graham. Mac works hard at the marina along the Gulf shore while pondering what he wants for his future. At summer’s end, they return to college where they resume their relationship. Unfortunately, their friendship with Graham does not survive and they do not see each other for almost two decades.

The One You’re With is multi-layered novel that is quite thought-provoking.  Mac and Edie are multi-faceted characters with relatable flaws and strengths. Mac’s decisions years earlier are a bit inexplicable especially since he is not very forthcoming about what is troubling him.  Edie tends to play it safe and stay with what she knows instead of stepping out of her comfort zone. The secondary characters are interesting and easy to like.  The storyline is well-written with relatable dilemmas that add to the characters’ growth. Lauren K. Denton brings this captivating novel to a realistic conclusion.

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Filed under Contemporary, Lauren Denton, Rated B+, Review, The One You're With, Thomas Nelson Publishing, Women's Fiction

Review: Hurricane Season by Lauren Denton

Title: Hurricane Season by Lauren Denton
Publisher: Thomas Nelson
Genre: Contemporary, Women’s Fiction
Length: 400 pages
Book Rating: B+

Complimentary Review Copy Provided by Publisher Through NetGalley

Summary:

From the author of the USA TODAY bestseller The Hideaway comes a new story about families and mending the past.

Betsy and Ty Franklin, owners of Franklin Dairy Farm in southern Alabama, have long since buried their desire for children of their own. While Ty manages their herd of dairy cows, Betsy busies herself with the farm’s day-to-day operations and tries to forget her dream of motherhood. But when her free-spirited sister, Jenna, drops off her two young daughters for “just two weeks,” Betsy’s carefully constructed wall of self-protection begins to crumble.

As the two weeks stretch deeper into the Alabama summer, Betsy and Ty learn to navigate the new additions in their world—and revel in the laughter that now fills their home. Meanwhile, record temperatures promise to usher in the most active hurricane season in decades.

Attending an art retreat four hundred miles away, Jenna is fighting her own battles. She finally has time and energy to focus on her photography, a lifelong ambition. But she wonders how her rediscovered passion can fit in with the life she’s made back home as a single mom.

When Hurricane Ingrid aims a steady eye at the Alabama coast, Jenna must make a decision that will change her family’s future, even as Betsy and Ty try to protect their beloved farm and their hearts. Hurricane Season is the story of one family’s unconventional journey to healing—and the relationships that must be mended along the way.

Review:

Hurricane Season by Lauren Denton is a thought-provoking novel of healing.

Betsy Franklin and her husband Ty own a dairy farm in Southern Alabama. They have weathered many storms (both personal and weather related) during the course of their marriage. When Betsy’s younger sister, Jenna Sawyer, asks her to keep her two young children, five year old Addie and three year old Walsh, a brewing hurricane is just one of the worries the couple are forced to reckon with over the next several weeks.

Betsy loves her life on the farm despite the hard work and concerns that plague most farmers.  She and Ty are deeply in love but she has struggled with giving up on a dream that, for unknown reasons, has failed to come to fruition for them. She loves her nieces but taking care of them is a bittersweet ache and she grows frustrated with Jenna’s decision to pursue her own goals. Despite their enjoyment of their nieces, Betsy and Ty are forced to face the unhealed wounds they have been ignoring for several months.

Ty is a sweet man who is devoted to Betsy and the dairy farm. His hard work is finally paying off and the Franklin Dairy has become one of the largest in the area. He has a sixth sense when it comes to predicting a hurricane’s path and as he tracks a growing storm in the ocean, Ty must also contend with the tempest building within his home.

Jenna put her dreams on hold after her unexpected pregnancies.  She is conflicted about leaving the girls in order to take advantage of an unexpected opportunity to  reconnect with her photography. However, Jenna knows a chance like this might not come along again and she wants to explore her options.

Hurricane Season is a captivating novel that is incredibly heartwarming. The storyline is well-written and relatable. The characters are multi-dimensional with realistic flaws and strengths. The farm is an idyllic setting and  Lauren Denton brings it vibrantly to life. The novel’s conclusion is heartwarming and quite hopeful. A deeply touching story that I truly enjoyed and highly recommend.

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Filed under Contemporary, Hurricane Season, Lauren Denton, Rated B+, Review, Thomas Nelson Publishing, Women's Fiction