Tuesday, June 30, 2026

On Hummingbird Wings, book #21

 


A nice break from the heavy stuff I have been reading!  It was a quick read because it drew me in fast.  Gave me several thoughts about what it might be like if I was "dying" and how my girls might respond.

"But Mother is always dying," is Gillian Ormsby's sarcastic response when her younger, favored sister tells her that she has to go take care of their hypochondriac mother. Begrudgingly, Gillian arrives in California to find the garden and yard dead, the blinds all drawn, and her mother indeed waiting to die. But when Gillian talks with the doctor, he assures her there's no medical reason behind her mother's state.  Gillian insists Mother get out of bed, eat, exercise and hopefully, choose to live. She also sets about reviving the garden to its former glory, enlisting the help of Adam, a handsome man who owns a family gardening business with his father. Gillian is delighted when a pair of hummingbirds appear, and her friendship with Adam grows.  Soon, Mother's health improves, and one day she announces she and her friend Enzio are going on a cruise. Before Gillian has time to turn around, her mother is gone and she is left high and dry again, and wondering, what is she going to do with the rest of her own life?   (picture and description at Amazon)

Gonna get started on the Christian Fiction book for July so I will have time to read all three book in the series for August! 

Hope you are enjoying summer reading!

MeLissa

Friday, June 26, 2026

Until We Find Home, book #20

 


Wow but wow but wow!  It took a while to get into this, but once I was hooked I was hooked!  This poor girl was so mixed up with so may emotions and situations, but once she worked through all of them (about 80% of the way through!) she had her head on straight and did what needed to be done.  Loved the characters, loved the detailed writing to help me "see" the locations, loved the history mixed in to teach me things that didn't come up in my class books & loved the ending.   Highly recommend!

For American Claire Stewart, joining the French Resistance sounded as romantic as the storylines she hopes will one day grace the novels she wants to write. But when she finds herself stranded on English shores, with five French Jewish children she smuggled across the channel before Nazis stormed Paris, reality feels more akin to fear.  With nowhere to go, Claire throws herself on the mercy of an estranged aunt, begging Lady Miranda Langford to take the children into her magnificent estate. Heavily weighted with grief of her own, Miranda reluctantly agrees . . . if Claire will stay to help. Though desperate to return to France and the man she loves, Claire has few options. But her tumultuous upbringing―spent in the refuge of novels with fictional friends―has ill-prepared her for the daily dramas of raising children, or for the way David Campbell, a fellow American boarder, challenges her notions of love. Nor could she foresee how the tentacles of war will invade their quiet haven, threatening all who have come to call Bluebell Wood home and risking the only family she’s ever known. (photo and description at Amazon)

I'm thinking it's time for another mystery thriller ...

Keep up summer reading!

Melissa


Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Run for the Hills, book #19

 


So, this book.  Hhm.  How do I feel about this book?  Quite honestly I'm not entirely sure.  

Rebecca got it for me for Christmas, as he is a Tennessee author and she thought I would like it.  The description sounded like it would be a fun read:

Ever since her dad left them twenty years ago, it’s been just Madeline Hill and her mom on their farm in Coalfield, Tennessee. While it’s a bit lonely, she sometimes admits, and a less exciting life than what she imagined for herself, it’s mostly okay. Mostly.  Then one day Reuben Hill pulls up in a PT Cruiser and informs Madeline that he believes she’s his half sister. Reuben—left behind by their dad thirty years ago—has hired a detective to track down their father and a string of other half siblings. And he wants Mad to leave her home and join him for the craziest kind of road trip imaginable to find them all.  As Mad and Rube—and eventually the others—share stories of their father, who behaved so differently in each life he created, they begin to question what he was looking for with every new incarnation. Who are they to one another? What kind of man will they find? And how will these new relationships change Mad’s previously solitary life on the farm?  Infused with deadpan wit, zany hijinks, and enormous heart, Run for the Hills is a sibling story like no other—a novel about a family forged under the most unlikely circumstances and united by hope in an unknown future. (pic and description from Amazon)

But was it really fun?  Yes and no.  I had trouble getting into it at first because I didn't much care for the writing style (a personal preference) and it was only the first two kids.  As the others were added it did pick up some, but I would hardly call it filled with zany hijinks.  I almost felt like there was more that one person writing it, as parts were really, really good, other parts took off on ways that did NOT sound like the author at all (all the basketball stuff), and the end was a major let down.  

All that to say ... last night when Katie casually asked me at supper what the book was about I went into a long 15-20 minute explanation, first about what actually happened and then about what the book was about (you will understand after you read it! 😊) and then I explained what happened in the book.  And as I was telling the story it was pretty unbelieveable, because of course I was adding crazy to it.  After a long deep sigh, I asked, 'So do you guys want to read it?' They just looked at me and said, 'Well, we don't need to read it now...' 

All in all, I'm ready to get back to my pioneers and indians or Civil War or something after these last few books! 🤣

Happy Summer Reading!

Melissa

Friday, June 12, 2026

To Win a Crown (True Blue Royal Book 3), book #18

 


Well, this was another Christian Fiction Readers Challenge book and even though I decided not to read the first two, I think I have a good idea about how these folks got to where they are today.  I wouldn't mind going back and reading them at some time, but not right now.

Cute book. good plot and drama, enough love to keep me happy.  Here is the thing that I kept thinking, though.  Rachel Hauck has written a plethora of books about royal families and I just wonder if she has some royal blood in her or if she just does A LOT of research.  I haven't read one of her "royal" books lately, but this one had a lot of rules, guidelines, laws, etc in it, along with all these different places.  How on earth does she come up with all these different names of countries and areas and castles and ... and ... and .... I look forward to asking that question on our Zoom meeting later this month! 

Scottie O'Shay has built a perfect life as creative director of her family's Tennessee fashion empire — until a reporter's exposé reveals she's the secret daughter of the Queen of Lauchtenland. Flying to Europe for answers, she's thrown into palace intrigue, ancient rivalries, and the steady gaze of Michael Cross — the bodyguard whose quiet strength makes her feel dangerously at home.  Michael has loved and lost. He won't risk his heart again — especially not on an American heiress with one foot already on a plane home.  But when a late-night kiss in a hidden doorway melts duty into devotion, neither one can pretend anymore. Then devastating news from Tennessee shatters the fairy tale, and Scottie faces an impossible choice: the safe life she built, or the uncharted kingdom where a crown — and a love she's barely begun to claim — wait for her. (picture and description at Amazon)

Not sure what is next, but I'm excited to finally be off for my half summer break from work!

Keep up the summertime reading!

O:)

Melissa