While I wouldn't really call this "Christian Fiction" (though it is marketed as such), it's certainly clean and uplifting. Characters do vaguely mention the Bible and praying a couple of times. But for it to be Christian Fiction, I would want to see a lot more active faith on the part of the characters, and that should somehow be involved in their character arcs.| The Edge of the Precipice
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Chase the Legend by Hannah Kaye is a fantasy retelling of Moby-Dick by Herman Melville. It's about a young woman signs on with a crew hunting a legendary dragon. She makes new friends, faces new and old fears, and finally comes to terms with the fact that she's been fleeing her future as much as her past. | The Edge of the Precipice
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
I did it! I read all four of these season-themed Christie collections in four consecutive seasons!| The Edge of the Precipice
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Yeah. Definitely a new comfort-read series.| The Edge of the Precipice
Friends, I think I have a new comfort author.| The Edge of the Precipice
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
I'm so glad that some reader friends of mine picked one of the short stories in this collection to include in the #DickensDecember buddy read event on Bookstagram last winter. These stories are so delightful! I can see why Brooke was a big hit back in the 1890s, even considered a female Sherlock Holmes. She's bright, knowledgeable, clever, and not sniffing around for a husband. That probably made her seem kind of unusual (and maybe unladylike) in her day, though now we're pretty used ...| The Edge of the Precipice
Oh my. This was very creepy. So creepy, I almost quit reading it about halfway through because I was afraid it was going to give me nightmares. But I decided to read a couple more chapters, and then eerie and creepy things started getting real-life explanations, and I went ahead and finished the book. It turns out that all the ghostly and creepy things were totally explainable and due to secret human activity, and there were no hauntings. There definitely were horrible murders in th...| The Edge of the Precipice
This is sad and melancholy and was hard to read. I'm glad I randomly read it because I wanted to finish off a hardcover anthology and not because I was reading all the Poirot stories in order, because if I was reading them in order and got to this as the very last one, I would now be very depressed. Instead, I have plenty of jolly Poirot mysteries to enjoy in the future still.| The Edge of the Precipice
First of all, I'm participating in the Clean Fairytale Summer event again this year! During all of June and July, the Clean Fairytales Group on Facebook is celebrating no-spice fairy tale retellings. There are door prizes for anyone who joins right away and reads the introductory posts on June 1 and 2. There will be giveaways, reading challenges, games and prizes, free downloads, and lots of chances to hang out with fairy tale retelling authors like me.| The Edge of the Precipice
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Rowan Farm is the sequel to The Ark and continues the story of the Lechow family as they attempt to build new lives and a new home in post-war West Germany. Informed on the author's own knowledge and experiences after WWII, these two books show the chaos and ruin of Germany after WWII, but also the courage and hope of the people who work together to make the country fit for life and love once more. | The Edge of the Precipice
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
My husband got me this book for my birthday, and it is a visual treat! Oodles and oodles of drawings and paintings by Tolkien, mainly related to Middle-earth, but not entirely. And each one has a note from his son Christopher explaining what the picture is, when it was done, where it was published before, and so on. | The Edge of the Precipice
Like Autumn Chills and Midwinter Murder, this is a collection of short mysteries by Agatha Christie that all take place in a particular season.| The Edge of the Precipice
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
I read this book in little snacks and nibbles over the past month or so. I liked it a lot, and am adopting a few ideas from it into my own home life and hospitality outlook. | The Edge of the Precipice
Prepare yourself for something very shocking.| The Edge of the Precipice
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com
Book reviews from the perspective of a Christian writer, wife, and mother.| theedgeoftheprecipice.blogspot.com