English

7.15.2013

Dragonwitch ~ Sneak Peek and Giveaway

Welcome to the Dragonwitch Blog Tour!

Due to all I have to offer you I've broken my Tour offering into two posts.  You are on the Sneak Peek / Giveaway post.
There are two(2) giveaways: the first is for one copy of Dragonwitch and  the second is for the entire blog tour and is for a copy of the entire 5 book Tales of Goldstone Wood (Heartless, Veiled Rose, Moonblood, Starflower, and Dragonwitch)!

You know you want to get a glimpse of Anne Elisabeth Stengl's latest Goldstone Wood foray and thanks to her generosity you can take a sneak peek today!

Are you ready?



Here it is a Sneak Peek from:




Dragonwitch


By Anne Elisabeth Stengl

The cat padded confidently, tail high and ears perked, down a certain path in the Wood Between, which grew in the strange, predominantly timeless stretch of existence separating the Far World from the Near. It wasn’t really a Wood, or not entirely a Wood. Indeed, the more the cat trod the various highways and byways beneath the trees’ long shadows, the more he suspected the Wood was itself a living consciousness, possibly many living consciousnesses all bundled into one. Some of those consciousnesses were pleasant enough sorts. More were cheeky devils, and the rest downright wicked.

The Wood would twist a person up and turn him round and flip him inside out if given half a chance. This the cat knew for certain.

But as long as one walked a path—a known, safe path belonging to a known, safe master—there was little the Wood could do to interfere.

So the cat remained firmly upon his particular path, scarcely looking to the right or the left. The Wood was always shifting around him in any case, and he did not expect to see familiar landmarks, or at least not in familiar places. That boulder shaped like a rabbit’s head, for instance, had been a good mile or two back up the way when he’d been here last. And that tree which last time had been split right down the middle as though by a bolt of lightning was mostly mended now, the trunk knitting itself back together with threads of green ivy and pins of stout branches.

No, landmarks were of little use to the cat. He was interested only in the gates.

He approached one of these now. To any mortal eye, it would look like nothing more than a thick cluster of bamboo standing incongruously in the middle of a fir grove. The firs were newcomers; the bamboo, however, remained ever in place.

The cat sniffed at it, his pink nose twitching delicately. Then he put out a paw and touched one of the slender green stalks. It swayed under that slight pressure but sprang firmly back into place when the cat removed his paw.

“Good,” said the cat. “Still locked.”

Just as he’d expected it to be.

He continued on his way.

There were several hundred such gates to be checked on this patrol through the Wood Between; soft places, so to speak, in the fabric of reality. Places where those of the Far World could all too easily slip into the Near, wreaking havoc on delightful mortal disbelief in Faerie tales and magic. Thus they must be locked. And those locks must be carefully guarded. So the cat patrolled this stretch of the Wood, following the path of his liege lord and checking all the gates.

Sometimes it still surprised him.

For one thing, he’d never much cared for mortals and their problems. Immortal himself, he had spent countless ages of cheerful existence never once considering those who lived beyond the Between in the time-bound realm.

And yet here he was. A knight. A defender of the weak, as it were. A minister of truth, advocate of justice, and who knew what other nonsense no self-respecting cat ever wanted to be!

The cat shook his whiskers as he continued his trek. The path opened up before him with each step, and the trees and ferns and underbrush drew back to make way. He tested another gate and another after that. All locked. All safe.

The fact was, he admitted to himself, he could no longer claim to be entirely indifferent to mortals.

“Dragons blast it,” he muttered. “I warned you, didn’t I, Eanrin? Get involved, and you’ll find yourself caring. Then there’s no end to the mischief!” He flattened his ears at this thought. He could blame no one but himself for his present circumstances, however. He had chosen this lot. Or he thought he had. Often he felt a little unclear on that score.

Often he felt that knighthood had been chosen for him against all his best efforts.

A certain smell tugged at the cat’s nose. Or rather, not a smell, but an unknown sensation whispering to an unknown sense, earnest and quiet and dangerous.

At first the cat ignored it. But within a few more paces, it had strengthened until his nose twitched and his tail flicked and his whole cattish being could no longer deny what he was sensing. He could only hope he was mistaken.

“But when has that ever happened?” he asked himself, with typical feline shortness of memory.

He turned and, stepping carefully, pursued a small path opening itself to him off his regular track. Very soon he found what he’d expected.

“Light of Lumé,” he growled then sighed heavily. “Not another one.”

Before him lay a circle of white stones shining out brightly against a bed of dark moss. Even a mortal might have recognized it for a Faerie Circle.

The cat recognized a new gate beginning to open.

From this position, he could not tell exactly where it opened to. It could be anywhere in the Near World. It wasn’t completely formed yet, he knew that much for certain. And, if precautions were taken, it might never fully form.

One way or another, it would have to be added to his regular patrol. An unguarded gate was a dangerous gate.

“Where do you lead, I wonder?” the cat mused, sniffing each of the circling stones in turn. Then he hissed and drew back sharply, his nose filled with the aroma of caorann berries. They littered the ground around the Faerie circle, dozens of them, squashed and stamped flat among the stones so that the moss was stained with their juices. No caorann trees grew in this vicinity that the cat could recall. Which meant someone had carried the berries here purposefully.

Caorann trees were known for one specific quality: their ability to unravel enchantments.

The perfume of the berries was very light, but once it entered the nostrils, it didn’t easily let go. The cat sat for a while grooming his face as though he could somehow push the smell out of his nose with one white paw. As he groomed, he thought.

Someone had been working enchantments here. Someone whose smell was now hidden by the caorann, all traces of enchantment dispersed. Everyone knew that knights of Farthestshore patrolled this particular stretch of the Wood, and someone wanted to disguise nefarious doings.

The cat finished grooming and sat quite still, his paws placed delicately before him, his plume of a tail sweeping gently back and forth and collecting squashed berry hulls. His eyes were mostly closed so that one might assume he dozed, but the thin membrane of his third eyelid remained open as he studied the setting from behind long, cattish lashes.

He came to a sudden decision and stood. Trotting back to his regular path, he hurried on to the closest gate. This appeared to mortal eyes like a pair of young trees with unusually large and twisted roots twining together in vegetable affection.

With a slight shiver of his whiskers, the cat stepped between these two trees and into another world.


Aren't you just tantalized by this little glimpse into Dragonwitch?
And it only gets better!




To read my review of Dragonwitch and my interview with Anne Elisabeth Stengl click here.

Now that you have been tantalized you can enter for a chance to win a copy of Dragonwitch.  Open to US residents only due to the cost of shipping.  Enter daily July 15 - July 22 to gain more entries!
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Be sure to visit ALL the tour stops:
July 14 - Day 1
July 15 - Day 2

July 16 - Day 3
July 17 
Blog Tour Finale and Prize Awarded back at the Tales of Goldstone Wood!
 Be sure to enter the 5 book Giveaway hosted by author Anne Elisabeth Stengl across the tour:



Dragonwitch ~ Review with Interview

Welcome to the Dragonwitch Blog Tour!

Due to all I have to offer you I've broken my Tour offering into two posts.  You are on the Review ~ Interview / Giveaway post.  There are two(2) giveaways: the first is for one copy of Dragonwitch and  the second is for the entire blog tour and is for a copy of the entire 5 book Tales of Goldstone Wood (Heartless, Veiled Rose, Moonblood, Starflower, and Dragonwitch)!

Dragonwitch
Tales of Goldstone Wood #5
Anne Elisabeth Stengl

Dragonwitch is yet another enchanting excursion into Goldstone Wood.  The opening starts with the Legend of the Brothers Ashiun
which gave me the same thrill of beauty that I felt when I read The Silmarillion by Tolkien.  There is an awe that this opening legend imparts that is hard to describe with words and its touches the very heart of one's soul!

Dragonwitch is two stories in one.  The first story is of the Brothers Ashuin - Etanun and Akilun  and the Flame at Night.  The second story belongs to Alastair, Leta, the Chronicler, and Mouse.  But these two stories are essential to each other because without one you won't fully grasp the other.

Alastair of Geheris is destined to become king of the North Country and the Lady Leta is to become his wife.  But Alastair is haunted and hunted in his sleep by the face of a child.  What can the meaning of his recurring dream mean?   While Alastair struggles through his unwanted lessons under his uncle's Chronicler, Leta secretly seeks out the knowledge that Alastair disdains.  The lessons the two pursue are steeped in the legends and nursery tales surrounding the House of Light and the Brothers Ashiun.  Is there any truth to the prophecy regarding the rising of an heir who will claim the long lost sword of Etanun?  

When Eanrin comes upon evidence that someone or something is attempting to force open a new death-house gate he becomes alarmed and warns Imraldera to keep an extra watch over the gate while he is away. But when the Murderer comes upon Imraldera in Eanrin's absence the gate is allowed to open and goblins pour into Geheris.  

The goblins search and dismantle the castle in search of a prize for their Queen Vartera.  The king-to-be is the key to goblins quest.  But the King-to-be is who Eanrin needs to save Imraldera.  But how can the future king of the North Country be in two different places at once.  Torn between duty, desire, fear, and feelings he can't explain the heir of Geheris and Etanun is about to embark on a life altering journey that could cost him his very life. 

Dragonwitch is a story of disappointment, sacrifice, betrayal, love lost and love found.  It is a story of new beginnings and lost dreams.  There are lessons for both the characters and the reader.  When we rely upon our senses we are restrained in how we view the world around because we see through preconceived perceptions.  We judge others on appearance, but the true measure of a person is who they are in their spirit.  

Dragonwitch won't disappoint and you'll want to revisit it again (as is the case with all the Tales of Goldstone Wood books) while you await Shadow Hand.  

I was provided a copy of this book by the publisher in exchange for my honest review.

7721_133549311830_623396830_3040333_1407935_n.jpgAuthor bio

Anne Elisabeth Stengl is the author of the award-winning Tales of Goldstone Wood series, adventure fantasies told in the classic Fairy Tale style. She makes her home in Raleigh, North Carolina, where she lives with her husband, Rohan, a passel of cats, and one long-suffering dog. When she's not writing, she enjoys Shakespeare, opera, and tea, and studies piano, painting, and pastry baking. She studied illustration at Grace College and English literature at Campbell University.
Interview with Anne Elisabeth Stengl

1) When there is mention of the Song of the Spheres do you have a song that comes to mind?  If so is it something grand or is soft and simple?


In my head, the Song of the Spheres is actually many songs, depending on who is hearing it. So sometimes it might be grand, sometimes soft.


The Song of the Spheres is an important theme in Dragonwitch, especially right at the final climactic scene. A few days before writing that scene, while mulling over how I would handle it, a song came on the radio that moved me to tears, it was so perfect, I thought: Gustav Holst’s Jupiter Theme (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqfTt3KN7vc)


My husband thinks of a different song, however. He says the perfect song would be a theme from the TV show Doctor Who: “The Ood Song of Freedom.” (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKa_oZ5NBiM) It’s a pretty neat option too! I think it’s safe to say it’s open to interpretation, though.

2) Etanun and Akilun: What was your inspiration for these two brothers?

100_3757.jpgWow, you know, it’s been so long since I started writing about them, I don’t even remember what the original inspiration was! I was sixteen, maybe seventeen when they first began featuring in the short stories I was writing about Goldstone Wood then. I remember specifically one epic story in which they traveled into the Netherworld to face a wicked red dragon who was poisoning the river flowing beneath the Mortal World. While that story has not yet made it into the series as it stands now, it was, I believe, the first story I wrote about the two brothers, and it even inspired a large illustration . . . which, while a little amateur, proved enough to get me an art scholarship to the college of my choice!

 So, I suppose I owe Etanun and Akilun a bit of a debt. LOL.

3) Death-in-Life is an ominous name, yet seems appropriate for this character.  Why this character?

This character is the counterpoint to his sister, Life-in-Death. Life-in-Death was directly inspired from a character in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s “Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” In the poem, the titular ancient mariner spies the phantom Life-in-Death gambling with Death for the lives of the crew . . . and it is she who wins the mariner himself.

I was so inspired and chilled by that scene, that I began developing my own riff on that character. And her brother became Death-in-Life, the Dragon—both her opposite and her completion. The Dragon has gone on to take a more prominent role in recent stories, but his sister will return in all her dreadful glory soon enough.

4) Alistair and Leta seem so different from one another.  Where Alistair scorns his lessons, Leta seeks lessons.  Why do you think some seek out knowledge while others do everything to avoid it?

I think Alistair is more afraid of being made to feel stupid than Leta is. Both of them started learning when older, which is much, much more difficult than growing up learning it. But Alistair sees reading and studying as a binding that keeps him from real life . . . Leta, by contrast, sees reading as her escape into a life far bigger than anything she has ever before known.

Personally, I don’t judge or blame Alistair for his attitude. It is difficult enough to learn a new skill without enduring cynical remarks from a short-tempered teacher such as the Chronicler! And he didn’t need reading to make his life broader and more complete. Leta needed it. Desperately, desperately needed it.

(And, seriously, the Chronicler is nowhere near so short-tempered with her!)

5) The old scrubber seems to have an inkling of what Alistair is experiencing in his dreams?  Why is this?

Well, the Scrubber knows a lot more about the workings of the worlds than anyone else in Gaheris Castle. And he has, I do not doubt, traveled himself into the Realm of Dreams, beyond the borders of the Wood Between. So he would have little to no trouble discerning what was going on inside Alistair’s head. Plus, it is implied that he is gifted with foresight and prophecy. He might even know directly what is coming for Alistair.

6) Where did you discover the Chronicler?  He seems to have a wisdom that Leta needs, especially when he tells her that she shouldn't listen to the lies that say the inner shape of the spirit is determined by the body's outer shape.


The Chronicler is another character, like Akilun and Etanun, whom I have toyed around with in short-story form for years . . . but he didn’t become the character he is now until late into the process of drafting Dragonwitch! I tried multiple variations on the theme, usually calling him by his true name. But when I started calling him simply “The Chronicler,” I learned a truth about him. He defines himself by his role. He sees his worth as existing only in his abilities, and so he doesn’t even bother with a name. He rejects himself as much as anyone else does. That was when he began to take on life as a real character!

I think this is why the Chronicler has such insight into Leta. He knows that he has defined himself by what others see, that he has allowed himself to be shaped and molded according to other people’s expectations. And he hates this about himself. But it is much easier to see your own faults in another person. So while he has so much wisdom and insight into Leta’s own character, he also needs her to point out the same in him.

Ultimately, he is not the stronger of the two. They are equally bound and equally in need of liberation.

7) In a conversation between Leta and the Chronicler we are told in summary "Belief cannot change the truth."  Why do you feel so many of your characters (and people for that matter) feel that what they believe is the truth even if it is obvious that the truth they cling to isn't truth?


People don’t like to be challenged in their worldview, in the comfortable little fortresses of belief in which they have shielded themselves. And I include myself in that statement! It is terrifying to have one’s beliefs challenged, to have to begin considering the possibility of other truths. In Dragonwitch, we see this reflected in a number of different characters as they are challenged in their faith, in their beliefs, in their understanding of truth. And yet the truth itself never does change. It forms the foundations beneath their feet, whether or not they can see it.


8) In the Tales of Goldstone Wood do you have a favourite book and a favourite cover?  If so what are they and why?


My favourite book is always the one I just finished writing. So that means Shadow Hand is my favourite just now, though I’m sure it will be supplanted by Book 7 in just another few months. 
My favourite cover . . . hmmm, that’s a little harder. I love most of them for different reasons. I love how both Heartless and Veiled Rose so perfectly fit their stories. I love the beauty of Starflower, which makes my very girly side go, “SQUEAL!” In a good way, mind you. I love the menace of Dragonwitch, which appeals to a different range of readers, particularly the male audience.

But I have to say, I think the new cover, Shadow Hand’s cover, might be my favourite. It’s so beautiful and there are many little details from the story represented. It’s just fabulous and fairy tale and wonderful! I have been blessed by the talented art team at Bethany House, who never fail to surprise and impress me.

Check-out the Sneak Peek/Excerpt of Dragonwitch along with a chance to win a copy of Dragonwitch here.

Now that you have been tantalized you can enter for a chance to win a copy of Dragonwitch.  Open to US residents only due to the cost of shipping.  Enter daily July 15 - July 22 to gain more entries!
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Be sure to visit ALL the tour stops:
July 14 - Day 1
July 15 - Day 2

July 16 - Day 3
July 17 
Blog Tour Finale and Prize Awarded back at the Tales of Goldstone Wood!
 Be sure to enter the Giveaway hosted by author Anne Elisabeth Stengl across the tour:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

7.10.2013

Neat Book related site I just had to share!

First off I need to thank Kent Barnard of the Patterson Memorial Library in Wild Rose, Wisconsin for sharing this neat website.  No, I've never been to Wild Rose.  But with a name like that I'd sure like to visit.  I picture roses everywhere.  HmmmI wonder if there are???

The website that Kent shared on the Wisconsin Library ListServe today was for Literature-Map.  If you have a chance check this out.

This is a link to a search I did using Literature Map, just click on a name a see where it will lead you!!!

7.09.2013

Madeline's Protector ~ Review

Madeline's Protector
By Vanessa Riley

Madeline St. James and Justain Delveaux, Lord Devonshire are brought together through a misunderstanding/mistaken identity and an attempt on one of their lives.  But when Madeline takes a bullet that could cost her her life, Justain does what is necessary to save for life.

But Justain's act of heroism could cost Maddie her reputation.  When Justain agrees to marry Maddie can this marriage that is in name only ever be anything more than a source of heartbreak for Maddie?

But Maddie is determined to be a true helpmate for her husband and to win his heart for Christ.  But the man who almost ended their lives before will stop at nothing to end them.  But Justain has sworn to be Madeline's protector as he is the reason that she has come to the attention of his greatest enemy.

But when the pair go to Avington - the estate of the St. James, Madeline's father and stepmother could destroy the fragile beginnings of a true relationship that are just beginning between the two.

Madeline's Protector is an exciting foray into the Regency period, with change and unrest coming to England.  Justain is a quandary, a man who is searching for fulfillment in his life.  Caring for the downtrodden and yet determined to have his word obeyed without question.  A man of honor who at time feels as if he has nothing of worth in himself.  Madeline has a great faith and she relies on this to help her in this marriage and in helping her new husband discover his true worth in the sight of God.  But is her faith enough to sustain her in the unexpected position she now finds herself in?

If you're a fan of Regency, Historical English Fiction, and Romance you're in for a treat as this delightful book wraps all three up between two covers.  Hopefully Vanessa will revisit Madeline and Justain sometime in the future with a sequel!

I was provided a copy of this book by the author Vanessa Riley and BookFun.org in exchange for my honest review of Madeline's Protector.

About Madeline's Protector :

If all the young men of England leapt off a cliff, Madeline St. James wouldn't care. Then she'd have peace. Her nightmares of courtship would end,and she'd cozy up with a Psalm in her aunt's quiet sculpture garden. Yet, a chance meeting and a bullet wound change everything, and Madeline must trust the Good Shepherd has led her to the altar to marry a dashing stranger, Lord Devonshire.
Death and pain are no strangers to Justain Delveaux, Lord Devonshire, and he vows his dutiful bride will be kept safe and in her place. Though this compromised marriage is in-name-only, his wife and her unwavering faith both intrigue and allure him. Perchance when he thwarts his brother's killer, Justain will tempt the unpredictable Madeline with the comfort of his arms.
But can Madeline and the stubborn earl forge a true bond before the next disaster strikes?

About Vanessa Riley

Writer of Christian Regency Fiction
The Regency and Victorian eras have always been a magnetizing draw for Vanessa Riley.  Even as she worked to complete her doctorate in Mechanical Engineering , she made time for renaissance fairs and any novel or cinematographic work depicting these genteel societies of old.  Perhaps, the attraction arises from the kinship she feels with the period being brought up in the restrictive Southern Bible Belt with its stringent definitions of decent behavior and life expectations. 
Perhaps the common denominator to this appeal is her own thirty day Christian courtship or even the arranged marriages of her uncles; each is emblematic of the nuptials of those earlier times.
A technology muse like Dr. Vanessa Riley is probably not the immediate choice to write about haute ton English society set in the 1800's.  With her most recent published work being “Reducing Deformation by Phase Manipulation,” the common visceral reaction is that Providence has given another mule a voice to tell His story.  Nevertheless, this mule uses her determined spirit and dogmatic tenacity to discover the hidden nuances of a character making him believable, her human and both ready to be used of God.

The Runaway King ~ Review

The Runaway King
By Jennifer A. Neilsen

Sage now Jaron has been recognized as the true heir to the throne.  But the threats against his life have been renewed when he attacked in the garden on the night of his family’s funeral.  The Avenian pirates have threatened to go to war with Carthya unless Jaron turns himself over to the Roden and the pirates in 10 days in Isel and he releases Bevin Conner.  King Vargan has threatened to go to war with Carthya unless Jaron turn over Carthyan land.
 
With his regents determined to put a steward on the throne in his stead, Jaron is left with few options to protect Carthya.  With his regents threatening to 1) place a steward on the throne until he comes of age and 2) send him into hiding Jaron is faced with a decision that will decide the fate of his rule and that of Carthya   When Jaron is left with the feeling that he is missing something  when he confronts Connor in the dungeon he sets out to find the pirates and stop them and Devlin before it is too late.  But time is short as the pirates have given him 10 days and the regents will act within 9.  Is there enough time to secure his position and to save those he holds dear?
 
Who can Jaron trust with the truth of what he has planned?  Mott?  Tobias?  Princess Amarinda?  Kerwyn the high chamberlain?  Gregor captain of the guard?  Can one of these people who are within his inner circle truly be trusted with information that could cost Jaron his life and how is he to know?
 
The Runaway King takes up where The False Prince left us and this is one sequel that won’t disappoint!  Action, sacrifice, betrayals and Jaron being yet again a fool – The Runaway King has it all.
 
The ending will leave you wanting more and is an excellent set up for the third book in the Ascendance Trilogy. 

7.08.2013

Rescue Team ~ Review

Rescue Team
Grace Medical #2
By Candace Calvert

Anyone can make a mistake, but some mistakes have a way of latching on to us and never letting go.  At least that is what Kate Callison has come to discover.  No matter how far away she goes, something brings back the guilt over what she has done.  And volunteer rescuer Wes Tanner is bad news as far as Kate is concerned especially when he is part of the stress group that the hospital has set up and expects her to attend as well.

When Kate stepped up to the challenge of filling Sunni Sprague‘s shoes she had no idea the hospital would become the target of  an anonymous concerned citizen who is crushing staff morale with attacks on the level of care being offered.  When a Baby Doe is found on the floor of the restroom everything takes a downward path.  Threats of a lawsuit, a grief and guilt stricken staff, a manipulative lawyer, and finger pointing are about to end Kate’s temporary position before she even has a chance to make it permanent.

But Kate has always moved from place to place avoiding close relationships, especially those with men.  But Wes could be different, he isn't like the other men who have disappointed her throughout her life.  But Wes can't forgive a certain sin nor can he extend grace to those who commit it, so how can he and Kate ever be anything other than acquaintances especially if the truth about her past comes out. 

Rescue Team is a set in a hospital environment but the true healing in this book is of the heart rather than of the body.  What one sees as an unpardonable sin another sees as a way to safety.  Who is right, who is wrong?  Who should decide?  As each of these characters reaches a crossroad in their life they must decide whether they are going to do it their way holding onto their individual hurts and pains or whether they will turn it over to God and accept true mercy and grace, the kind that only God can provide.   

7.07.2013

Small Town Girl ~ Review

Small Town Girl
By Ann H. Gabhart

Summer 1941 is a time of transition for Kate Merritt.  Her sister is marrying the man she has loved since she was a teenager.  There are rumblings of war on the horizon, but nothing that would affect Rosey Corner.  Or would it?

When Kate meets Jay Tanner at her sister's wedding she's about to meet the man that will change her life.  But though Kate and Jay have something special a misunderstanding could end it all before it has a chance to become a happily ever after.

Small Town Girl is a sweet story that deals with the pains of life and disappointment.  What is often times a disappointment can in fact be the hand of God making a way for something better.   Evie's marriage to Mike brings Jay Tanner into Kate's life.  And when the attack on Pearl Harbor brings America into the war on the Pacific front this new man in Kate's life is about to be in harm's way.

I really enjoyed getting to know the folks who lived in Rosey Corner (some more than others), it actually reminds me of the town where I live.  Everyone knows everything about everyone, or they think they do anyways.  Small Town Girl offers up some big lessons for everyone.

This is one small town I plan to visit again.  Why don't you join me in Rosey Corner, you're sure to enjoy the break from the rush of your day-to-day responsibilities!

 I received this book free from Revell Publishers in exchange for my honest review.  All opinions are my own.

Available July 2013 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group.

About Small Town Girl


How long can two people stand on the brink of love without plunging in headfirst?

In the autumn of 1941, rumors of war whisper through Rosey Corner. The town practically vibrates with apprehension, as if it is holding its breath. But for Kate Merritt, it seems life is letting out a prolonged sigh. As Kate watches her sister marry the man Kate has loved since she was fifteen, her heart is silently breaking. And even the attentions of Jay Tanner, the handsome best man, can't draw her interest.

Then suddenly, Pearl Harbor changes everything and Kate finds herself drawn to Jay in surprising ways. Could she truly be in love with him? And if he enlists, will she ever see him again?

In her gentle and textured style, Ann H. Gabhart tells a timeless story of love, sacrifice, and longing that will grip your heart and stir your spirit. Fans of Gabhart's Angel Sister will love seeing Kate Merritt all grown-up, as well as other characters they have come to love.