Friday, April 19, 2024

"If the Boot Fits" by Karen Witemeyer

About this book:

  “Determined to prove that cattle king Eli Dearing has no justification for evicting his stepmother and half brothers, Asher Ellis uses the cover of a fancy ball to break into the Three Cedars ranch house to search for proof of wrongdoing. On the verge of discovery, he flees, but a boy's cry compels him to make a daring rescue.
    Spunky and independent, Samantha Dearing balks when she learns the ball her father is hosting in her honor is nothing more than a matrimonial ambush. Taking a break from her unwanted suitors, Samantha spots a thief fleeing her home. When the stranger ends up saving her brother's life, she hides the only clue to his identity left behind--his boot--and resolves to find him herself.
    But when Samantha encounters the older brother of a student she tutors, all thoughts of the bootless mystery man vanish. And although Asher tries to keep his distance from Samantha for reasons of his own, a series of suspicious accidents befall her, and his protective instincts flare, no matter the cost to their future.”


Series: Book #2 in the “Texas Ever After” series. I did not finished the first book due to content and it seems like no characters from that book were mentioned in this one. 


Spiritual Content- Psalm 118:9 at the beginning; Many Scriptures are read, remembered, thought over, quoted, mentioned, & discussed; Bible reading; Many Prayers & Thanking and Praising God (and a blessing over food); Talks about God, trusting Him, & His timing; 'H's are not capital when referring to God; Samantha wonders if her being a girl is “such a sin” that it would alter her father’s love/attention towards her; Samantha wonders why God would allow a tragedy to befall His faithful servants but a woman encourages her that there’s a reason and continues to trust God; Asher wonders why God allows disparity among His people in the way that everyone lives; An unwed mother believes God quit helping her when she let a man sweet-talk her into his bed, which Samantha disagrees with and voices; A few diary entries that have a woman upset with God not giving her a child, saying that another woman can be barren because God needs that woman’s time for His work (this thought it not corrected on page at all), & saying that God has failed her and believes He is withholding His blessing, *Major Spoilers* She took matters into her own hands after reading about Sarah (thinking that God did not curse Hagar and instead took pity on her and the child) and goes to have an affair for a year to be able to get pregnant; She eventually realizes that she rejected God’s plan for her own and asks for forgiveness; See Major Spoiler note in Sexual Content *End of Spoilers*; Many mentions of God, trusting Him, & His timing; Many mentions of prayers, praying, & blessings over food; Mentions of thanking & praising God and Jesus; Mentions of Bibles, Bible reading, & books of the Bible; Mentions of those & events in the Bible; Mentions of churches, church going, services, worship, sermons, & preachers/ministers; Mentions of callings & ministries; Mentions of blessings & being Blessed; Mentions of sins & partaking in sin; A few mentions of miracles; A few mentions of a birthmark being said to be where the angels kissed a child; A couple mentions of a pastor sensing a soul in need of salvation (& the person trying to leave the pastor’s presence as soon as possible); A mention of Providence; A mention of the pearly gates; 
             *Note: Other phrases such as “Good heavens” (x8), “Heavens” (x6), “Heaven knows…” (x4), and “For heaven’s sake” (x1) are all said; A fire being described as “a menacing demon stalking its prey”.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘biddy’, a ‘good grief’, a ‘thunderation’, two ‘shut up’s, two ‘stupid’s, and six ‘shoot’s; A man calls Samantha a ‘cow’; Eye rolling & Sarcasm; Being shot at, being stalked, Being locked in a house on fire, a carriage accident, a rattlesnake being on the character, & shaking and crying after all of these near-death experiences (up to semi-detailed); Gunshots, being shot at, being held at gunpoint, fighting, being hit/attacked, injuries, pain, helping someone who was shot, seeing others shot and bleeding, & seeing someone else being held as hostage at gunpoint (*Spoiler* a twelve-year-old boy on the last one *End of Spoiler*, semi-detailed); Saving someone from drowning (up to semi-detailed); At the very beginning, Asher trespasses into the Dearing home during a party to gain information that could possibly lead to blackmail (Asher thinks of his plan as just); A drunk man threatens & grabs at Samantha (Asher threats the man with broken bones, up to semi-detailed); Asher threatens a man who means harm to Samantha & wishes to beat another to a bloody pulp for harming her; Mentions of someone nearly drowning & other near-death experiences (a carriage accident, a run in with a rattlesnake, & being locked in a house on fire, up to semi-detailed); Mentions of deaths, deaths of loved ones, & grief (for a wife, a mother, & both parents, barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of injuries, blood/bleeding, pain, & possible deaths (up to semi-detailed); Mentions of gunfire, shooting/shooting at someone; Mentions of thieves, stealing, trespassing, break-ins, jails/prisons, crimes, criminals, & possible hanging; Mentions of fires, arson, being locked in a house on fire, smoke, passing out, & injuries (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of a man grabbing at a woman & pulling her into an alley; Mentions of a young boy being slapped/hit for his mouthy comments to an adult; Mentions of a father kicking his daughter out of the house due to her being an unwed mother (she wonders if she’ll have to give up her son despite it being like ripping out her heart); Mentions of alcohol, drinking, a drunk, & saloons; Mentions of lies, lying, & liars; Mentions of hatred; A few mentions of poison, someone who was murdered with poison, & a plan to do it to another; A few mentions of nightmares; A few mentions of gossip & rumors; A few mentions of jealousy; A couple mentions of a dead body; A couple mentions of blackmail; A couple mentions of gambling & poker; A couple mentions of eavesdropping; A couple mentions of cigarettes & tobacco; A mention of a chamber pot; 
             *Note: Samantha & her father have a strained relationship due to her believing that he doesn’t care about her well-being because he sent her away & her late mother’s comments that implied that Samantha wasn’t enough (we quickly learn that this is not the case and see their relationship improve, albeit still having Samantha’s past hurts because of his actions and believing that he had no use for a daughter; She wonders if her prejudices and bitterness are clouding her thoughts towards him and still works for forgiveness towards him, up to semi-detailed on her emotions and feelings); Samantha becomes interested in a trespasser because that means the man wasn’t afraid to defy her father (a tiny rebellious part of her thinks this) & that she would like to best her father at finding out about the trespasser; A few mentions of the women’s suffrage movement & wanting to be equal; A couple mentions of a character’s “true” father (biological); A mention of a struggling with infertility feeling “darkness” descend over her.
 
 
Sexual Content- A hand kiss, two forehead kisses (one that arouses feelings), a cheek kiss, a border-line barely-above-not-detailed // semi-detailed kiss, and three semi-detailed kisses; Remembering kisses (up to semi-detailed); Touches, Embraces, Warmth, Butterflies/Tingles, & Nearness (up to semi-detailed); Remembering touches, embraces, & nearness (up to semi-detailed); Wanting to touch & embrace (up to semi-detailed); Noticing (barely-above-not-detailed); Blushes; a ‘harlot’ and a ‘hussy’; Samantha has romantic daydreams of Asher after he rescues her; Asher panics when he sees Samantha messing with her skirt in a way that could imply she’s disrobing (mentioning Lady Godiva and they are both very embarrassed by it; she was adjusting her skirt, not taking it off); *Major Spoiler but Important Content Note (Affairs and Infertility)* Samantha receives her late mother’s diary and reads the entries of her mother being upset with God (believing He cursed her) for not letting her get pregnant, saying that God might want her pastor’s-wife-sister to be barren to have more time to do His work but there’s nothing gained by her infertility, saying that God failed her by her giving birth to a girl who is “of no value” (Samantha, but does start to soft her heart towards her in later entries), and feels “darkness” descending over her; She took matters into her own hands after reading about Hagar and Sarah & since she knows her husband won’t welcome another woman into his bed, she plans to have an affair as it could be her husband having the barrenness (despite a doctor not admitting the fault might lie with men); She views it as a business transaction comparing it to bulls and cattle, adding that there will be no love as she needs his “seed”; She tells herself that she is doing it for her husband, but her conscience doesn’t recognize the “nobility” of her quest; After the first time, she feels soiled about a man who is not her husband touching her and thinks that she betrayed her husband, asking for God to forgive her; To use her guilt, she eagerly welcomes her husband into her bed, but continues the affair for a year in hopes of finally getting pregnant (which she does and guilt eats at her conscience, saying that the end results justifies whatever it took, but knows it’s a lie as she rejected God’s plan for her own); When Samantha tells Asher about it, she calls it not being a love affair, but more like a “breeding opportunity” and tells her father it had no emotional attachment and “strictly a breeding exercise” *End of Major Spoilers*; Mentions of affairs & illegitimate children; Mentions of a man getting a woman to his bed, her getting pregnant, the man not accepting the child as his and will not marry the woman (who is going to get kicked out of her family’s home because of it), & him seducing and bedding other women (he accuses the mother of the baby of rolling “around in the hay” with other men and says she ruined herself, not taking any responsibilities for the child; She considers herself tarnished because of it and believes God quit helping her when she let the man sweet-talk her into his bed, which Samantha disagrees with; *Spoiler* This is Samantha’s good friend and Samantha refuses to minimize that the man was an equal participant of the consequences of the sin, perhaps even the instigator of it; She gets very upset and tells her father that it is his problem as well because “the older and wiser men of our society turn a blind eye to the bad behavior of their young proteges” so nothing will stop this from happening again; She angrily asks why that when “a man and woman have relations outside of marriage, the woman is considered to be a harlot, but the man is simply ‘sowing his wild oats’? ...when the man is equally responsible for the child’s existence?”; Her father agrees that it’s unfair for the woman, but also the “truth that she chose to give herself to a man not her husband” and Samantha brings up about the woman in the woman who was being stoned for adultery and assuming that the man was covered for by other men *End of Spoiler*); Mentions of a man’s womanizing ways, bragging about a “love shack”, & him taking multiple different women there for years (Samantha’s younger brother knows about the love shack and how babies are made due to breeding cattle & she is horrified by knowing that he knows about such things); Mentions of kisses & kissing; Mentions of flirting & flirts; A few mentions of the women who work at saloons & men paying to meet them in a place to be alone; A few mentions of jealousy; A couple mentions of a man being caught while engaged with a woman in “unsanctioned behavior”; A mention of some men seeking “female companionship” (implied to be more than just talking); A mention of a loose woman; A mention of a man’s roguish gaze towards women; A mention of a woman possibly being assaulted by Asher (he wonders if someone thinks he would do this, but he wouldn’t); Love, falling in love, & the emotions;
             *Note: Samantha, after being forced into a mothering role at a young age and her dreams being freedom and independence from familial responsibilities, now wonders about holding a baby of her own; Mentions of woman being barren (Samantha assumes that her aunt mourned the loss of not having children and wonders how she and her husband let go of that pain with no resentment towards God; Also heavy mentioned in the Major Spoiler section above); A few mentions of a woman’s monthly bleeding; A few mentions of men having to strip down to their underwear under an officer’s orders (looking for a criminal). 
 
-Samantha Dearing, age 19
-Asher Ellis
                                P.O.V. switches between them 
                                             Set in 1889
                                                        368 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

{Trigger warning: Affairs, Infertility, & mentions of sexual assault from manipulation}

Despite not finishing the first book in this series due to content, I was still curious about this book because of it being a light (and reverse) Cinderella retelling. Our male lead is the Cinderella (but with a good stepfamily) and our female lead is the princess. I really liked the family aspect of both main characters and loved seeing their brothers. 

 

Here’s the thing: fairytale retellings are a genre I typically expect to be lighter in terms of content. Sure, the originals are yikes and often disgusting to say the least, but most retellings—at least in the Christian Fiction realm—are light. Not much to note in the way of content. This series hasn’t been that way at all. In this book particularly, I am incredibly disappointed in how heavy that twist in this story is weighing on my heart. 

 

I often figure out the twists in books. My mom is convinced it’s because I read so much that there’s nothing left to surprise me with. It could be that or it could be the fact that my brain goes ninety to nothing when reading and is always trying to figure out what’s going to happen. With this book though, I started to get frustrated that Samantha couldn’t see who the culprit was. It felt incredibly obvious to me and I wanted to smack her over the head with the knowledge. Especially after she learned Very Important Information towards the end of the book. The beginning of the book was very cute and yet it also felt slow paced, I was just waiting for a shoe to drop (no Cinderella pun intended) and when that “surprise” entered in, I knew it was the proverbial shoe. 

 

I was greatly enjoying this book until the last quarter or so which entered in content that dramatically affected these ratings. I won’t say much here, but the details of it is listed in the Sexual Content part of this review. It does have to do with a wife planning an affair, it being treated as a business transaction, and illegitimate children. (Also the woman having messed-up theology.) I unfortunately saw this coming on the horizon it was very disappointing to see that my thoughts were correct. It’s such a bummer because the romance between our main couple was so cute and there was a really good faith content, but that content is just not sitting well with me along with a man who seduced a woman into going to bed with him. 

 

I’ve been sitting here, typing these final thoughts and staring at my screen for over fifteen minutes now, trying to gather my thoughts. This book is not recommended for ages 9-19, the target ages of BFCG. Each reader will obviously decide for themself and I will not be the one to tell you “no, don’t read this book.” I will never say that because my job is to give the information of what’s in the book, the content found within. Yes, I am above the age range of 9-19. I could give it a two star rating, which I’ve been debating as I stare at my computer screen. Because I did like their romance (there wasn’t even that much noticing!) and the faith content. But that just doesn’t feel right to me. I feel weighed down and heavy from the twist this book had and while the ending ends in a hopeful note, there’s still lingering sadness to me. I can’t in good conscience give this book a higher rating because of the content, despite the majority (not all) of the first half being enjoyable because by the end of the book, I didn’t like it. Which is terribly sad and disappointing. 

 

 

 

See y’all on Friday with a new review! 




*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.


Monday, April 15, 2024

"Dawn Chandler" by Eliza Noel

About this book:

  “Dawn Chandler likes the way her life is— or was. She liked going to the mall with her best friend, excelling at middle school, and attending church with her family. Typical life for a twelve-year-old in the city of Fresno.
   When Dawn’s parents announced they were going to homeschool her, on her birthday no less, she felt like her world was falling apart. Normal kids are supposed to go to school, not read books at home. To make matters worse, they may be leaving the only home she’s ever known. 
   What are her parents thinking?
   Before making the final moving decision, the Chandler family visits Lone Pine, a small town between Mt. Whitney and Death Valley. While there, Dawn and her siblings become acquainted with their eccentric great uncle, explore the new area, and meet a large homeschooling family. All of this makes the 'vacation' more bearable. Still, Dawn isn't sure if she can make the move and leave everything she’s familiar with behind.
   Can Dawn learn the values of faith, family, and contentment?”


Series: Book #1 in the “Dawn Chandler” series. 


Spiritual Content- Scriptures are read & discussed (most in a sermon); Prayers & Blessings over food; Church going & a sermon about contentment (which Dawn makes notes on); Dawn’s parents decided to homeschool their kids after praying about it and due to “recent things at school that as Christians we can’t morally agree with”; *Spoilers* Towards the end, after a sermon, Dawn has a “heart check” and tries to be more content; At the end, Dawn realizes that God used coming to the new town for good and is happy *End of Spoilers*; Mentions of God; Mentions of prayers, praying, & blessings over food; Mentions of churches, church going, pastors, sermons, worshiping, & worship songs; Mentions of Christian bands/singers (Citizens of Glory, Skillet, Royal Tailor, & Branan Murphy); A few mentions of Bibles & Bible reading; A few mentions of those & events in the Bible; A couple mentions of blessings; A mention of being Christians; A mention of Heaven; 
             *Note: Dawn wonders if the new town is working a “spell” or using its “magic charms” on her because she’s not as miserable as she thought she would be; A mention of ghosts (teasing); A mention of Santa Claus; A mention of cave girls.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘dumb’; Eye rolling, sarcasm, & sibling teasing (nearly all eye rolling and sarcasm are done in a teasing/non-mean spirited way); A field trip to a concentration camp for Japanese-Americans during World War II (Dawn finds it sad and creepy, barely-above-not-detailed); 
Dawn is sad to leave her hometown and friends & is upset at the situation but thinks that her parents know what’s best for her…“probably” (she goes back and forth thinking that it will be awful and it being a new adventure; She does voice an attitude and shows a bit of defiance a few times, which her parents comment on her to change it; *Spoilers* Towards the end, Dawn feels bad for being rude to her parents and apologizes to them; Shortly after, she gets in a bad mood again (causing her little sister to cry) and her mother and her have to have a discussion *End of Spoilers*); Dawn gets in a bad mood (attitude and disrespectful) & her mother and her have a talk; Dawn isn’t sure about being homeschooled because school has practically been her whole world; Dawn and her best friend’s relationship gets a bit rocky throughout the book because of making new friends and being in different places (*Spoiler* It causes Dawn to wonder if they even had a real friendship; Dawn goes to her house to talk and the friend apologizes for how she’s been acting *End of Spoiler*); A girl comments to Dawn about her being stuck up and snobby since Dawn is from the big city (which Dawn showed none of this towards her and Moriah says that the girl is going through a lot and is “upset with the world right now”); A few jabs/mean comments from a bully (which Dawn says one back and feels guilt over it; nothing is resolved about that, hinting that it might be discussed the next book in the series); Mentions of someone falling off a roof & the injuries (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of a concentration camp for Japanese-Americans during World War II; A few mentions of injuries from mountain biking accidents (including paralyzing someone); A few mentions of bullies & bullies; A couple mentions of the Civil War (referring to an outfit from that time period); A couple mentions of bullets & shooting; A couple mentions of jail; A mention of crimes; A mention of robbers; A mention of stealing; A mention of jealousy; A mention of gossip; A mention of a someone looking like a dying dog when trying to dance; A mention of animal poop; 
             *Note: When an older teen teases Dawn and makes comments against her hometown, she wants to slap him (but does not); Mentions of stereotypes of those who live in the country and homeschoolers & Dawn being shocked by the lack of accuracy; Mentions of books, fictional characters, & quotes from them (Anne of Green Gables & Nancy Drew); Mentions of movies & TV shows (Princess Diaries, Gladiator (which isn’t allowed to be watched), Sound of Music, Snowball Express, & America’s Funniest Videos); A few mentions of restaurants & fast food chains (Red Robin, Olive Garden, & McDonald’s); A few mentions of brand names (Uggs & Nike); A mention of Disney (referring to an old movie); A mention of social media (YouTube); A mention of a girl in black sitting by herself (which Dawn is shocked to see emo kids in the new town); A mention of zombies. 
 
 
Sexual Content- Dawn notices a handsome/cute older boy a few of times (including his kind attitude to others; her brother teases her about him once later); A few mentions of a handsome/cute boy & that Dawn and her friend would be giggling about him if together.
 
-Dawn Chandler, age 12
                                P.O.V. of Dawn (Prologue in Moriah’s)
                                                        167 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

This was such a cute large family and homeschool family representation! 


I was a little concerned that Dawn would be a stinker or rude because of the impression of her not wanting to move or be homeschooled, but while she was sad and upset, she was mostly respectful and only had an attitude a handful of times (which her parents commented on and was always corrected and/or discussed), which I appreciated. It was realistic and also had the proper lessons with parental guidance and correction. 

 

One minor comment I would note would be the statement about someone’s dancing looking like a “dying dog” which might upset some sensitive dog/animal lovers.

 

I don’t have too much to say about this middle-grade books besides that I really enjoyed it, the lessons, and could see many pre-teen/tween girls enjoying it as well!

 

 

See y’all on Friday with a new review! 




*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.

*I received this book for free from the Author for this honest review.

Friday, April 12, 2024

"Tracking a Killer" by Elizabeth Goddard

About this book:

  “Can an officer and her furry partner survive a killer and the wilderness?
   When Rocky Mountain K-9 officer Harlow Zane and her cadaver dog, Nell, join the search for a serial killer, the last thing she expects is that she’ll draw the killer’s obsessive attention. But her former academy rival, FBI Special Agent Wes Grey, notices she matches the victim profile. After another look-alike goes missing, they must work together to catch the criminal…before Harlow’s the next to disappear.”


Series: Part of the “Rocky Mountain K-9 Unit” mini-series under the “Love Inspired Suspense” line. It does mentions characters and events from other books in the series. 


Spiritual Content- 1 Peter 4:8 at the beginning (& mentioned in the author’s note at the end); Another Scripture is mentioned (about vengeance not being ours); Thanking God; Many prayers (the majority of the prayers are asking God for something or for Him to please do something); Harlow prays once to get past her resentment and anger towards Wes; Wes comments on sin and murder being the first crime against humanity; Mentions of God & prayers; A few mentions of God’s creation; A couple mentions of Christians & talking about one’s faith (Wes does this one Harlow finds it a nice surprise); A mention of a Bible.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: two ‘idiot’s and three ‘stupid’s; A mention of a curse (said, not written); Being attacked, Being hit with a shovel, Being drugged, Being held at knife-point, Being tied-up, nearly abducted, fighting back (self-defense), passing out, & PTSD from it when recalling those events (up to semi-detailed); Gunfire, Attacks, & shooting to kill someone and being successful (up to semi-detailed); Seeing someone being attacked & nearly abducted (twice, up to semi-detailed); Finding someone attacked (believed to dead and the person who found the other is distraught before realizing that the person is still breathing, up to semi-detailed); Murdered bodies are found (including recalling finding a murdered child, up to semi-detailed); Harlow is attacked and nearly abducted five times & recalls it (including via a nightmare, up to semi-detailed); Harlow wants to use herself as bait for the serial killer *Spoiler* and when they do use her for bait, her beagle is shot with a dart (but is fine as the killer says he doesn’t kill dogs), she is taken by the killer while being held at knife-point and tied-up; Harlow is afraid that she might actually die, but Wes comes and saves her *End of Spoiler*; *Spoiler* At the end, Wes is drugged and abducted by the serial killer to lure Harlow out and she’s afraid Wes was killed; She finds him and thinks he’s dead until she noticed that he’s breathing; The serial killer planned to kill him for being in the way; The serial killer also says that the other women wanted him to take them, which Harlow corrects that they didn’t (he’s not mentally stable, up to semi-detailed) *End of Spoiler*; As a child, Harlow *Spoiler* found the body of a murdered little girl in a house’s walls and it terrified her (the child went missing three decades before and was assumed to be murdered by a neighbor who was “fixated” on the girl; All parties involved are dead so there was no justice for the situation happened; up to semi-detailed) *End of Spoiler*Harlow & Wes have a history together prior to the book starting & there’s mentions of when they exploded at the other (verbally); All about many mentions of a killer/serial killer, the victims, the bodies, Harlow’s cadaver detection beagle finding the remains, the “scent of death”, abductions, & how the deaths happened (up to semi-detailed); Mentions of a missing/kidnapped baby, a car fire, an unconscious woman, & another woman being killed in a supposed car accident (up to semi-detailed);  
 

Mentions of crimes, crime scenes, & criminals; Mentions of gunfire, being stabbed, knives, injuries, blood/bleeding, & a break-in (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of nightmares & screams (Harlow after the attempted abductions); A few mentions of someone being stalked/watched; A few mentions of prison; A couple mentions of hostage situations; A couple mentions of vandalism; A couple mentions of alcohol & a possible alcoholic; A couple mentions of rumors; A mention of someone trying to commit suicide; A mention of a possible baby smuggling ring; A mention of drugs; A mention of stuffed wildlife heads at a cabin; 
             *Note: The serial killer is called a psychopath & that his plans made “twisted sense” to him (It’s implied that the serial killer isn’t mentally stable); Mentions of Harlow going to therapy for a past event & it being required for her to go to a therapist/counseling after an event in this book (Wes thinks that he will probably go as well); Mentions of car brands; A few mentions of a mental rehab center; A couple mentions of many serial killers having “varying degrees of mental illness[es]” and are “often victims of abuse”; A couple mentions of a suspected serial killer spending his childhood going “from one foster home to another” and someone else adding that “plenty of people have those characteristics who aren’t killers, of course. They’re just struggling.”; A couple mentions of Wes’ mother having a stroke.
 
 
Sexual Content- A hand kiss, an almost kiss, a forehead kiss, two not-detailed kisses, a barely-above-not-detailed kiss, and a semi-detailed kiss; Remembering kisses (semi-detailed); Wanting to kiss (up to semi-detailed); Touches, Embraces, Cuddling after a traumatizing event, Hand holding, Heat, Electricity, Nearness, & Smelling (up to semi-detailed); Remembering touches & embraces (up to semi-detailed); Wanting to touch & embrace (up to semi-detailed); Blushes; Noticing & Staring (including muscles, up to semi-detailed); Harlow & Wes used to date years before the book starts; After Harlow is attacked for the second time, Wes stays with her in her cabin to protect her (he sleeps in a chair or another bed, but at one point does try not to stare at her sleeping form and fails; Later he thinks of it as playing house; barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of dating, a breakup, & exes; Love, falling in love, being in love, & the emotions.
 
-Harlow Zane
-Wes Grey
                                P.O.V. switches between them 
                                                        217 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

As a beagle mom, I was here for the beagle and the beagle only in this story. And really, that’s truly all I liked about this book, unfortunately.  

 

Harlow wasn’t the smartest law enforcement agent I’ve read about, that’s for sure. When she pulled over to change a flat tire in a place she knows the serial killer has recently been, she let her guard down. She has a gun but didn’t have it on her, so that part was a bit ridiculous. 

 

I thought it was also ridiculous that she felt like she had to prove herself on the team when she becomes a target of the possible serial killer—twice. Girl, your own safety is important too! She’s afraid that she’ll get kicked out of the group for her own protection and prays that it’s “not fair” to God. She acted like she was a teenager at times and it was very annoying. 

 

We’re constantly being told that she’s a trained police officer and a professional and can do her job, but, honestly, we haven’t seen much of that. Honestly, it would have made more sense if she wasn’t law enforcement and just a girl from his past with her dog because she never acted professional in her reactions. 

 

This book was 70% focused on their romance and their failed relationship and history, rather than the suspense of finding a killer. The romance parts were very dramatic and was incredibly distracting for their mission. 

 

We get teased a lot with their history with being told some of the details about the fallout but not the actual details of what happened. She actually knows the exact number of days since their blow up. (Eight years, five months, and ten days, to be exact.) 

 

There was also mentions of a young child being murdered that honestly just broke my heart. While it does unfortunately happen, it’s not something I’d like to ever read about without a heads up to be able to prepare myself the best I can about such a topic. 

 

I’m really bummed that this book was such a miss for me because the beagle on the cover and in the plot. I won’t recommend it for BFCG’s ages because of their romantic attraction, lack of faith moments, & the topic of a murdered child. 

 

 

See y’all on Friday with a new review! 



*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.