Category Archives: Recommended Read

Review: The Best Man by Kristan Higgins

Title: The Best Man by Kristan Higgins
Blue Heron Series, Book One
Publisher: Harlequin
Imprint: Harlequin HQN
Genre: Contemporary, Romance
Length: 432 pages
Book Rating: A+ & A Recommended Read

Review Copy Obtained from Publisher Through NetGalley

Summary:

SOMETIMES THE BEST MAN IS THE ONE YOU LEAST EXPECT…

Faith Holland left her hometown after being jilted at the altar. Now a little older and wiser, she’s ready to return to the Blue Heron Winery, her family’s vineyard, to confront the ghosts of her past, and maybe enjoy a glass of red. After all, there’s some great scenery there….

Like Levi Cooper, the local police chief—and best friend of her former fiancé. There’s a lot about Levi that Faith never noticed, and it’s not just those deep green eyes. The only catch is she’s having a hard time forgetting that he helped ruin her wedding all those years ago. If she can find a minute amidst all her family drama to stop and smell the rosé, she just might find a reason to stay at Blue Heron, and finish that walk down the aisle.

The Review:

With her trademark wit, realistic characters and zingy one liners, Kristan Higgins brings readers yet another outstanding romance that is outrageously funny and full of emotion. The Best Man is a captivating novel that will keep you laughing out loud as Faith Holland heals the wounds of her past and finds love with Levi Cooper, the gruff yet lovable man who broke her heart when he stopped her wedding to the love of her life.

Escaping to San Francisco when her marriage was called off, Faith Holland is finally ready to return to her small hometown and the family winery. When her siblings need Faith’s help ejecting a scheming woman from their father’s life, Faith agrees to temporarily come home and find their dad a more suitable partner. This visit will bring her face to face with all of the complex issues and people she has successfully avoided in the past. Faith soon finds her small town, friends and family slowly working their magic on her, and she is soon considering making her homecoming permanent.

Levi Cooper is just as scarred by his past as Faith is. Growing up in a trailer park with his single mom and much younger sister, Levi worked his way through high school, played on the football team and enjoyed a close friendship with his best friend Jeremy Lyon, Faith’s high school sweetheart and former fiancé. The military was Levi’s ticket to a better future and after four tours in Afghanistan, he returns home with a wife and finds a new career on the police force. Now divorced, he works long hours as the police chief and he is dedicated to his younger sister, Sarah. He remains close friends with Jeremy and he maintains his slightly skewed perspective of Faith. He is the strong silent type with a heart of gold and I absolutely adored him.

One of the things that I have come to expect in a Kristan Higgins novel is a delightfully quirky cast of characters. They are always richly developed with realistic flaws that make them easy to relate to. Their interactions are laced with humor that is laugh out loud funny and sometimes so breathtakingly poignant it will break your heart.

As with Ms. Higgins’ previous novels, there is a strong family bond between Faith and her extended family. These relationships are wonderfully imperfect but the love between family members is always apparent. Faith’s grandparents’ relationship is full of bickering and beautifully illustrates that love is not always full of romantic moments. Faith’s older sister’s marriage shows that keeping the passion in a long term marriage takes hard work and creativity. With Faith’s father, we learn that love is not blind and that we love our partners despite their imperfections.

The Best Man is one of those multi-layered novels that quickly engages the reader. Each layer reveals many different facets of the characters and enriches the overall story. The romantic plot between Levi and Faith is slow growing and deliciously steamy. But before Levi and Faith can find their happily ever after, they each must deal with their respective messy pasts. Each of these storylines is fascinating and provides a great deal of depth and growth to both of their characters.

The Best Man is a novel that will make you laugh and cry and it is a story that you will hate to see end. Luckily, it is the first installment of Kristan Higgins’ Blue Heron series and we will have the chance to revisit this charming cast of characters in the not too distant future.

I loved every outrageous, zany, and heartfelt moment of this wonderful story and you will too.

7 Comments

Filed under Blue Heron Series, Contemporary, Harlequin, HarlequinHQN, Kristan Higgins, Rated A+, Recommended Read, Review, Romance, The Best Man

Review: Learning to Stay by Erin Celello

Title: Learning to Stay by Erin Celello
Publisher: Penguin/NAL Trade
Genre: Contemporary, Fiction
Length: 352 pages
Book Rating: A+ & A Recommended Read

Review Copy Obtained from Publisher Through NetGalley

Summary:

Elise Sabato is proud of her husband, Brad, for serving his country…and grateful when he returns home to her. But the traumatic brain injury he suffered in Iraq has turned him from a thoughtful, brilliant, and patient man into someone quite different….someone who requires more care and attention than Elise can give while working in a demanding law firm. And when Brad ends up on his family’s farm, hundreds of miles away, she wonders where their marriage is headed.

Elise must decide between the life she always wanted and the life she seems to be living…until she finds inspiration in the most unlikely of places: a lovable dog named Jones who teaches her that when the best-laid plans take unexpected turns, sometimes you end up right where you were meant to be.

The Review:

What would you do if your significant other changed dramatically following an injury or illness? In Erin Celello’s Learning to Stay, that is exactly the quandary that Elise Sabato is in following her husband Brad’s return from his deployment in Iraq.

Brad Sabato escaped serious injury when the convoy he was riding in was hit by an IED. Elise’s relief and joy at his safe return soon turns to despair when she realizes there is something drastically wrong with her husband. Brad is now prone to violent and angry outbursts and he is unable to perform the most basic of daily tasks. He begins drinking heavily and Elise is constantly walking on eggshells around her now volatile husband. Genuinely afraid not only for herself, but also for Brad’s safety, she arranges for him to go live with his father while she tries to come to terms with their uncertain future.

Elise’s struggle to reconcile the husband who returned home from Iraq to the man she married is utterly heartbreaking. As the sole breadwinner in the family, she is caught in a horrible position once she realizes that Brad needs constant care. Elise is also facing the terrible realization that the dreams and hopes she and Brad once shared are no longer possibilities once she comprehends the full ramifications of living with someone with traumatic brain injuries (TBI) and post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Learning to Stay is an incredibly poignant novel that highlights the hidden injuries of war as well as the struggle to re-integrate into life at home after serving in combat. It also details the difficult and complex journey that veterans and their families face when they attempt to find treatment for TBI and PTSD. Erin Celello does an outstanding job demonstrating the devastating toll these injuries take on the lives of the injured and their loved ones.

Learning to Stay is a compelling and moving novel that I highly recommend.

5 Comments

Filed under Contemporary, Erin Celello, Fiction, Learning to Stay, NAL Trade, Penguin Publishing, Rated A+, Recommended Read, Review

Review: Saturday Night Widows: The Adventures of Six Friends Remaking Their Lives by Becky Aikman

Title: Saturday Night Widows: The Adventures of Six Friends Remaking Their Lives by Becky Aikman
Publisher: Crown
Genre: Contemporary, Biography, Autobiography
Length: 352 pages
Book Rating: A+ & A Recommended Read

Review Copy Obtained from Publisher Through Edelweiss

Summary:

Six marriages, six heartbreaks, one shared beginning.

In her forties – a widow, too young, too modern to accept the role – Becky Aikman struggled to make sense of her place in an altered world. In this transcendent and infectiously wise memoir, she explores surprising new discoveries about how people experience grief and transcend loss and, following her own remarriage, forms a group with five other young widows to test these unconventional ideas. Together, these friends summon the humor, resilience, and striving spirit essential for anyone overcoming adversity.

Meet the Saturday Night Widows: ringleader Becky, an unsentimental journalist who lost her husband to cancer; Tara, a polished mother of two, whose husband died in the throes of alcoholism after she filed for divorce; Denise, a widow of just five months, now struggling to get by; Marcia, a hard-driving corporate lawyer; Dawn, an alluring self-made entrepreneur whose husband was killed in a sporting accident, leaving two small children behind; and Lesley, a housewife who returned home one day to find that her husband had committed suicide.

The women meet once a month, and over the course of a year, they strike out on ever more far-flung adventures, learning to live past the worst thing they thought could happen. They share emotional peaks and valleys – dating, parenting, moving, finding meaningful work, and reinventing themselves – while turning traditional thinking about loss and recovery upside down. Through it all runs the story of Aikman’s own journey through grief and her love affair with a man who tempts her to marry again. In a transporting story of what friends can achieve when they hold each other up, Saturday Night Widowsis a rare book that will make you laugh, think, and remind yourself that despite the utter unpredictability and occasional tragedy of life, it is also precious, fragile, and often more joyous than we recognize.

The Review:

Becky Aikman’s Saturday Night Widows: The Adventures of Six Friends Remaking Their Lives is a poignant yet uplifting story about six women and their struggle to redefine their lives following their husbands’ deaths. It is an inspirational novel that should be on everyone’s reading list.

Saturday Night Widows is not just a novel for someone who has lost their spouse. Death is an unavoidable fact of life and Ms. Aikman’s memoir provides incredible insight into the grieving process. Her research and interviews challenge conventional theories on the five stages of grief and demonstrate that everyone grieves in their own way. It also offers practical information for supporting someone who has suffered the loss of their spouse. Although the story focuses on widows, anyone who has suffered a loss will gain a better understanding of the grieving process.

Their stories are heartbreaking, but it is the upbeat and positive attitudes of these wonderful women that makes Saturday Night Widows such a compelling read. Through their support group, they find the courage to step out of their comfort zones. Their monthly get togethers are not a time to rehash their losses, but a time to have fun and experience life to the fullest. Their support for one another is unconditional and they cheer each other on as they begin new relationships and move on to the next chapter in their lives.

Becky Aikman has written a captivating tale that will resonate with anyone who has ever lost a loved one or knows someone who has. Saturday Night Widows is not a book about loss but a moving story of friendship. It is a beautiful novel about surviving devastating losses, moving past that heartache and embracing the future.

3 Comments

Filed under Autobiography, Becky Aikman, Biography, Contemporary, Crown, Rated A+, Recommended Read, Review, Saturday Night Widows: The Adventures of Six Friends Remaking Their Lives

Review: Tarnished Souls 3: Sacred Hearts by Dev Bentham

Note: Edited to reflect new cover & publisher

sacred heartsTitle: Sacred Hearts by Dev Bentham
Publisher: Love is a Light; 2nd edition
Genre: Contemporary, M/M, Romance, Erotic
Length: 137 pages
Book Rating: A+ and a Recommended Read

Complimentary Review Copy Provided by Author

Summary:

Life’s a gamble–and lately David Schwartz’s partner has been losing so much that David must close their restaurant, the hippest little place in Portland. He sells everything and moves back home, but at thirty-five, he’s not eager to sleep alone in his childhood bedroom or to be supported by his father for the second time in his adult life.

David’s had enough. He needs to start over, maybe with someone like the elusive man he’s been seeing in his dreams. An old friend offers him a job catering a movie set in Puerto Vallarta. It’s been years since David’s alcoholism spun out of control along the highways of Mexico. Determined to experience Mexico sober, he stuffs his few remaining possessions in a backpack and takes the next flight down.

As Mexico prepares for Christmas, David lights Hanukkah candles, celebrating the return of the sun and wishing for true love. On the first night of Hanukkah, David meets a tall, dark stranger who rocks his world in a secluded moonlit cove. Is this the mystery man of his dreams–the answer to David’s prayers? And what must David sacrifice to make his dreams come true?

The Review:

Sacred Hearts, Dev Bentham’s third installment in her Tarnished Souls series, is a beautifully written love story between two captivating and incredibly engaging protagonists. Following the loss of both his boyfriend and his business, David Schwartz is in desperate need of a new beginning. It is with much trepidation that David accepts a job in Puerto Vallarta, where years before, he found then lost his first love. His return to Mexico offers David the opportunity to make peace with his past and a chance meeting with an enigmatic stranger gives him hope for his future.

In the aftermath of his failed relationship and business, David picks up the pieces of his life, maintains his long term sobriety and discovers a great deal about himself in the process. David’s reflections on his first ill-fated relationship play a pivotal role in understanding how he ended up his last relationship and why he stayed in it. This self-awareness is crucial when he is forced to face his ex-lover as David deals with the unpleasant details involved with the closing their business.

There is an almost mystical quality to David’s meeting with the man he meets in Mexico. His new lover proves quite elusive and gives up very few details about himself. Their encounters are sexually charged and sizzling hot. There is also a charming aura of innocence as David’s new man stretches beyond his sexual comfort zone.

In Sacred Hearts, Ms. Bentham does a fabulous job of weaving together two very different faiths. The lead characters are both very spiritual and their strong beliefs add another layer to this richly detailed story. Along with hope, the rituals of David’s religion also bring him peace.

I really like the fact that the main characters in Sacred Hearts are both older. Their life experiences have molded and shaped them into the men they are and this maturity provides them with added depth. There are a few missteps and misunderstandings that advance the plot and provide insight into both protagonists. The story is realistic and delightfully angst free.

Dev Bentham brings the characters and setting vibrantly to life in this emotionally complex and compelling novel. Sacred Hearts is full of unexpected twists and turns and a romance that is so sweet it will take your breath away.

An incredible story of healing, hope and love that I highly recommend.

Read my reviews of the other stories in the Tarnished Souls series HERE.

2 Comments

Filed under Contemporary, Dev Bentham, Erotic, Loose Id, M/M, Rated A+, Recommended Read, Review, Romance, Sacred Hearts, Tarnished Souls

New Author Spotlight, Character Interview, Review & Contest: The Nothingness of Ben by Brad Boney

I want to give a big Texas thank you to Kathy (a big New Mexico you’re welcome, Brad :)). This is my first novel and I’m still finding my way around. Kathy reached out to me on Twitter and I am so grateful she did.

To introduce my story, The Nothingness of Ben, I interviewed one of my favorite characters, Quentin Walsh. This was my first time doing anything like this, so I was a little nervous. Here is the unedited transcript:

Brad Boney: Hi, Quentin.

Quentin Walsh: Hi, Brad.

BB: Is this kind of odd for you?

QW: Kind of. But we can push through it.

BB: Tell us who you are.

QW: My name is Quentin Walsh. I’m eighteen years old now, though during the action of the book I was sixteen, going on seventeen.

BB: Do you know you just made a few fans among the musical theater crowd?

QW: Yeah, Jason told me to say that.

BB: Who’s Jason?

QW: One of my brothers. I have three of them. Ben, Jason, and Cade. The book is about Ben, mostly, but wouldn’t you say it’s also about the whole family?

BB: I have always said that. Can you give us an overview of the story?

QW: Sure. It all started when our parents were killed in a car accident. I know you’re probably thinking, damn, that sucks. And it did. I’m not going to pretend otherwise. I was just a teenager, Jason was two years younger than me, and Cade was only twelve. Ben was a decade older than us, and honestly, we barely knew him. We’d seen him maybe five times in five years. After he left home, he got all wrapped up in his Columbia Law New York City lifestyle.

BB: You didn’t have nice things to say to him after the accident.

QW: No, I didn’t. I said some things I regret. I was just trying to look out for my brothers. And I was terrified of what would happen if they split us up.

BB: Tell me about Travis.

QW: He’s a great guy. A mechanic. Huge heart and perfect for Ben. And let me tell you, my big brother can be a real… well, never mind about that. I should have known something was up the minute they met at the cemetery.

BB: That’s the scene on the cover of the book?

QW: Yeah. Didn’t L.C. Chase do an awesome job? I love the way Cade hasn’t taken Travis’s hand yet. She really captured us.

BB: Where does the title come from?

QW: Look Homeward, Angel, by Thomas Wolfe. Our dad was an English professor at UT-Austin. That’s where we live. He had two favorite books: Look Homeward, Angel and The Sound and the Fury, by William Faulkner. He named us after the Compson siblings in The Sound and the Fury.

BB: Do you remember the quote from Look Homeward, Angel? The one with the title of my book?

QW: No, sorry. Jason knows, but I don’t remember it. I think it’s on your website (www.bradboney.com).

BB: Have you read Look Homeward, Angel?

QW: Yeah, I’ve read it. I thought it was kind of insufferable. Okay, so I admit, the last twenty pages are breathtaking—that’s the word my dad used—but the endless descriptive passages? Overwritten. Not quite as bad as Kerouac, but still.

BB: You didn’t like On the Road?

QW: I hated it. I’ve never read a book that screamed out for an editor more.

BB: I think that was the point.

QW: Then the point was lost on me.

BB: What writers do you admire?

QW: Chuck Palahniuk.

BB: I never know how to pronounce that.

QW: It sounds like the first names of his grandparents smashed together. Paula and Nick. PaulaNick.

BB: So you like Fight Club?

QW: I love Fight Club. All the Walsh brothers love Fight Club. Book and movie.

BB: The Walsh brothers watch a lot of movies, right?

QW: We do. One of the things that happens when your parents die, is that your world shrinks down. We spent those first weeks afterward in our living room watching movies. That was our comfort zone. It was the only place we felt safe.

BB: Favorite movies?

QW: Donnie Darko, Little Buddha, Inception, Twelve. Did you see The Devil’s Double? Explain to me how Dominic Cooper didn’t win an Oscar for that.

BB: I don’t get it either. You like dark movies.

QW: When you’re sixteen and your parents die, the world is not all pink bunnies and lemonade.

BB: You play an important role in the book, don’t you?

QW: I guess you could say that. Ben can be a little slow in the human interaction department. I helped him course correct a few times. As my mom used to say, sometimes Ben just needs a good swift kick in the pants.

BB: So what’s up next for the Walsh brothers? Is there going to be a sequel to The Nothingness of Ben?

QW: Sequel? Jesus, I hope not. If you write another book about Ben, we won’t be able to fit his head through the door. The next story is a spin-off, not a sequel.

BB: Who’s the main character?

QW: Topher Manning. One of the other mechanics at Groovy Automotive.

BB: That’s where Travis works?

QW: Right. We all appear as supporting characters. I like working part time.

BB: What’s the name of that book?

QW: The Return.

BB: Sounds intriguing. Are you excited about the release of The Nothingness of Ben on November 23?

QW: Yeah, we’re pretty stoked. Dreamspinner Press really did us a favor releasing it the day after Thanksgiving.

BB: Why’s that?

QW: Because our story is chock full of gratitude. And the last scene takes place on Thanksgiving Day.

BB: What’s your tagline for the book?

QW: Sometimes the worst possible thing imaginable leads you to the place you were meant to be all along.

BB: Do you believe that?

QW: I do now.

BB: Anything else you care to add?

QW: Yes. I want to let people know about The Ally Coalition (www.theallycoalition.org). I think it’s criminal that Ben and Travis can’t get married in Texas. The Ally Coalition is a place where straight people can show their support for marriage equality and other LGBTQ issues. It was started by the band FUN. They’re coming to Stubbs in February. You got your tickets?

BB: I got my tickets. Sold out, I heard.

QW: Yep. I heard the same thing.

BB: I’ll see you there, then. Thanks for doing this, Q.

QW: Always happy to put in my time at the press junket, Brad.

BB: Smart ass.

QW: Nah. I’m not a smart ass. I’m just written that way.


Author Bio:

Brad Boney lives in Austin, Texas, the 7th gayest city in America. He likes to tell stories about the hot boys in his neighborhood near the University of Texas. Brand new to M/M fiction, he plans to set all of his books in Austin and hopes to become an ambassador for his city. He grew up in the Midwest and went to school at NYU. He lived in Washington, DC and Houston before settling in Austin. He blames his background in the theater for his writing style, which he calls “dialogue and stage directions.” He believes the greatest romantic comedy of all time is 50 First Dates. His favorite gay film of the last ten years is Strapped. He has never met a boy band he didn’t like. Brad is currently single, and although his heart is open to love, he’s not sure his schedule is.

Please visit Brad on the web at http://www.bradboney.com or on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/BradBoney.


Title: The Nothingness of Ben by Brad Boney
Publisher: Dreamspinner Press
Genre: M/M, Contemporary, Erotic, Romance
Length: 248 pages
Book Rating: A+ & A Recommended Read

Review Copy Obtained from Author

Summary:

Ben Walsh is well on his way to becoming one of Manhattan’s top litigators, with a gorgeous boyfriend and friends on the A-list. His life is perfect until he gets a phone call that brings it all crashing down: a car accident takes his parents, and now he must return to Austin to raise three teenage brothers he barely knows.

During the funeral, Ben meets Travis Atwood, the redneck neighbor with a huge heart. Their relationship initially runs hot and cold, from contentious to flirtatious, but when the weight of responsibility starts wearing on Ben, he turns to Travis, and the pressure shapes their friendship into something that feels a lot like love. Ben thinks he’s found a way to have his old life, his new life, and Travis too, but love isn’t always easy. Will he learn to recognize that sometimes the worst thing imaginable can lead him to the place he was meant to be?

The Review:

Brad Boney’s debut novel, The Nothingness of Ben, is absolutely amazing. It is a beautiful story of love and hope that will completely captivate you as the Walsh siblings and Travis Atwood become a family following a terrible loss.

Reeling in the aftermath of his parents’ death, Ben Walsh steps up and becomes the guardian of his younger brothers, Quentin, Jason and Cade. Barely able to take care of himself, let alone three teenagers, Ben depends on neighbor and friend Travis Atwood to help him with their daily routine. Their close friendship soon turns into a romance that is quickly complicated by the stresses of Ben’s new life. When a misguided attempt to introduce his brothers and Travis to his old life in New York does not go quite as planned, Ben must make some difficult decisions about his future and exactly what role, if any, Travis will play in it.

Mr. Boney’s character development of lead protagonists Ben and Travis is exceptional. They are immensely likable, well-rounded and so realistic they leap off the pages and right into your heart. They are not larger than life heroes, but every day, average men trying to find their way during life’s harsher moments. Their struggles are realistic and they make mistakes. But it is what they learn from their mistakes and how they find solutions to their problems that makes The Nothingness of Ben such an magnificent story.

Quentin, Jason and Cade are typical teens. Of the three, Quentin is the most angry about Ben’s perceived desertion of their family. He is skeptical that Ben will come through for the boys and he does not cut Ben any slack. In addition to his grief over his parents’ death, middle brother Jason is fighting his own battles and he is keeping secrets from Ben. Cade is quite different from his older brothers and although is the youngest, he is the most perceptive.

One of the things I found most appealing about The Nothingness of Ben is Brad Boney’s writing style. I never felt like I was reading a book. Instead, I felt like I was right there with the characters, experiencing their emotions and reactions to events as they occurred. I especially appreciated how Mr. Boney’s minimalist approach to scene building kept the story from becoming bogged down in too many superfluous details.

The Nothingness of Ben is a quiet but incredibly compelling novel. There is no over the top conflict, no grand gestures, and very little angst. But that is exactly what makes it such an extraordinary read. It is a refreshingly realistic romance that I hated to see end!


To celebrate his upcoming release, Mr. Boney is giving away a copy of The Nothingness of Ben (winner’s choice of digital or print) to one lucky commenter. To enter today’s contest:

You must Do TWO of the Following:

1. Sign up for e-mail updates (upper left corner). One email daily with the day’s posts.

OR:

2. Be or become a fan of Book Reviews & More by Kathy Facebook page

OR:

3. Follow me on Twitter (@BookReviewsMore)

OR:

4. Friend Book Reviews & More by Kathy on Goodreads

Make sure you have filled out the contest entry form:

5. To be eligible to enter contests on Book Reviews and More by Kathy you MUST fill out the contest entry form (found HERE). This form only needs to be filled out ONCE. Your privacy is important to me, and I will not share your information.

And don’t forget to:

6. Leave a comment (be sure and let me know if you would prefer a print copy) on this post by 5 PM Mountain Time Friday November 23rd.

It’s that easy! The winner will be selected using random.org. The winner will be announced on Saturday November 24th.

16 Comments

Filed under Brad Boney, Character Interview, Contemporary, Dreamspinner Press, Erotic, M/M, New Author Spotlight, Rated A+, Recommended Read, Review, Romance, The Nothingness of Ben

Almost Amish by Kathryn Cushman

Title: Almost Amish by Kathryn Cushman
Publisher: Bethany House Publishers
Genre: Contemporary, Inspirational, Fiction
Length: 336 pages
Book Rating: A+ and a Recommended Read

Review Copy Obtained from Publisher

Summary:

Proving the Simple Life Isn’t So Simple After All

Overcommitted and overwhelmed, Julie Charlton is at the breaking point. She knows she should feel blessed as a mother and wife–but she just feels exhausted. And then, the miraculous happens. Her sister-in-law Susan, a Martha Stewart-in-training, lands the chance to participate in a reality TV series about trying to live like the Amish and needs another family to join her. It’s just the break Julie needs.

But the summer adventure in simple living soon proves anything but simple. With the camera watching every move, Susan’s drive for perfection feels a lot like what they left behind, while Julie suddenly finds herself needing to stand up for slowing down. Whether it’s cooking, cleaning, or dressing differently, each new Amish challenge raises new complications… and soon each woman learns unexpected lessons about herself and her family.

The Review:

Almost Amish by Kathryn Cushman is a captivating novel that will resonate with anyone who feels overwhelmed by today’s busy lifestyles. Dissatisfied, discouraged and unhappy with her current lifestyle, Julie Charlton quickly agrees to guest star on a reality TV show, Almost Amish with her sister-in-law, Susan Reynolds. For Susan, this is an opportunity to advance her career. For Julie, it is a much needed break from her hectic, frenetic life, a way to reconnect with her kids and a chance to figure out what is missing in her life.

Julie is a wonderful character and I suspect a lot of people will identify with her. I know that I certainly do. She is overscheduled, overworked and hates her life despite the fact she has a loving husband and two pretty terrific kids. She is laidback, easygoing and has a difficult time saying no. Julie is far from perfect and she is also her harshest critic. She has low self-esteem and she consistently feels like she does not measure up to other’s expectations. Julie easily adjusts to their simpler life and she discovers she enjoys a slower pace. She savors her newfound closeness wit Susan,h her children and her niece.

A type A personality, “helicopter” Mom who is extremely focused and career driven, Susan is the complete opposite of Julie. She is a perfectionist with high expectations of herself, her daughter and Julie. Susan is looking so far ahead that she often misses what is happening in the here and now. Convinced she knows what is best for her, she is completely out of touch with daughter. Susan is quick to judge people with her opinions often based on nothing but their appearance. Her divorce deeply damaged her self-confidence and she is desperately trying to secure her and her daughter’s future.

The kids are pretty typical teenagers. Julie’s kids, Brian and Whitney are not happy about giving up their summer and activities, and neither is Angie, Susan’s daughter. For the most part, they give in gracefully and comply with most of the rules. However they are teens, so there are a few mini rebellions that take place over the summer.

The secondary cast of characters is well-developed. Segment producer Kendra Stein is the least likable and probably a pretty good representation of what goes on behind the scenes of reality TV. We get to know Julie’s husband Thomas a little through his visits. Handyman Gary Macko is a calming and helpful influence. There is a definite attraction between him and Susan that helps soften Susan’s rougher exterior. Rosemary Foil is not only their quilting instructor, but she does a wonderful job teaching a few valuable life lessons to her students.

Both Julie and Susan learn a lot about themselves and they come to appreciate one another’s differences. There is a lot of character growth throughout the course of the novel. Julie discovers her backbone and stands up for herself and others. Susan learns a few humbling lessons and she also has to make a difficult career decision.

Almost Amish is a refreshingly unique and thought-provoking novel. It is impossible to read without re-evaluating your own life and priorities. Kathryn Cushman delicately weaves valuable life lessons and strong undercurrents of faith throughout the story.

An insightful novel about slowing down and enjoying life, Almost Amish is an absolutely delightful read that I thoroughly enjoyed and highly recommend.

9 Comments

Filed under Almost Amish, Bethany House Publishers, Christian, Contemporary, Fiction, Kathryn Cushman, Rated A+, Recommended Read