“Sung in the Shadows” by Crystal Caudill Excerpt + Blog Hop

I’m so excited to be the last stop as part of a “Blog Hop” today for the new release from author Crystal Caudill, Sung in the Shadows. It’s a historical mystery and romance. I’m sharing an excerpt from chapter 2 of the book and giveaway info to enter to win autographed copies from the author. Please read on for more about the book, the giveaway link, and the riveting portion of chapter 2! You can stop by the previous blogs participating if you want to start reading from the beginning of chapter 1.

About the Book

When past darkness prowls, will stepping into the light lead to a brighter future?

In nineteenth-century Cincinnati, fear keeps Nora Davis caged with secrets and lies. Her true identity as the daughter of a famous opera singer is too dangerous to reveal with her former captors still on the loose. But weekly singing lessons at Longview Asylum—her paranoid mother’s permanent residence—light a flame in Nora, and it’s one she can avoid fanning for only so long.

With his suicidal ma in the asylum, Ezekiel Beaumont’s soul is weary, but Nora’s presence at the asylum intrigues him. As a Pike’s Opera House employee, Ezekiel thinks Nora might be cut out for the stage. He also begins to wonder if Nora’s ma is really the famed Constanza Brisbane, who went missing mid-performance. He’s determined to find out.

Though Ezekiel brings the performance world a little too close for comfort, Nora is drawn to his warm personality all the same. The two of them steadily grow closer, but then Nora begins to fear she’s being watched, and her own paranoia blooms.

As the line between what’s real and false grows fainter, will Ezekiel’s and Nora’s faith and love overcome?

Sung in the Shadows: Chapter 2 Excerpt

To read chapter one and the first part of chapter two, find them by clicking here.

Cincinnati, Ohio

January 18, 1881

They went through the usual routine. Nora gave a carefully curated description of her safe and boring week. Then she reassured Mum she wasn’t hiding anything—except maybe her escapades with the Guardians. She and Father were truly well. No, the kidnapper had not yet been found—not that he ever would be. And finally, yes, Nora still carried her knitting needles everywhere with her for protection.

After ensuring Nurse Abbott wouldn’t see, Nora exposed the contraband’s tips in her pocket to Mum. If it was discovered she’d brought anything with even a dull point into the room, she’d be escorted out immediately. Nora understood the precaution for potentially dangerous patients, but Mum hadn’t attacked anyone in ages.

Finally Mum broke free of her fear and came alive with music. “Have you been practicing your scales and exercises?”

“Every day.”

“Good. Then show me how you’ve improved your transitioning between registers since last week.” Mum took her place at the piano. Nora nodded and mentally prepared for the task at hand. Singing was no mere throwing out of notes. There was science behind it, and while not purely academic, singing with a full voice, accurate intonation, and smooth transitions between the chest, medium, and head registers was as much a mental exercise as it was physical and musical. Nora stood upright, ensuring her head was erect and shoulders back, then closed her eyes and drew a deep breath. As she released it, she focused on relaxing every muscle that would affect her singing.

Once satisfied, she nodded to Mum to play the scales.

Though Mum was a strict taskmaster and insisted on perfection, Nora reveled in this brief time of normalcy. No matter what point of life Nora reflected on, her relationship with Mum had been founded on music. She couldn’t remember a time when Mum hadn’t given her lessons. Even after Father banished music from their home, she and Mum had persisted while Father worked at the accounting office. Even if Nora was forever relegated to sing in the shadows and never on a stage, she would cling to these lessons and the youthful joy they returned to Mum’s face. For an hour in every visit, Mum was the vivacious woman who had captivated so many.

As Nora worked through a particularly difficult transition from her medium to head registers, she caught sight of the reception room door opening in her periphery. The familiar broad form of Mr. Beaumont entered the room with a basket over his arm and his wide, easy smile in place as he greeted Nurse Abbott. If Nora weren’t so well trained in masking her facial expressions, she’d have given away her embarrassment at being caught singing by him. However, as good as she was at controlling her countenance, her loss of focus was obvious. Mum reprimanded Nora’s suddenly flat intonation.

Nora cut off the scale completely. “I think it best we quit for today. I’m afraid this weather has impacted me. If I continue any longer, I risk fatiguing my voice.”

A lie, but she couldn’t risk the man remarking to someone else about the singing lessons held at the asylum. If she knew Mr. Beaumont’s name without a formal introduction, then he likely knew hers. They crossed paths nearly every week while visiting their mums, and she’d worked exceedingly hard to avoid any sort of conversation with him. Previous experiences with other men had taught her that charm and kind manners were often used to lure a woman into compromising situations. With her mum here, Mr. Beaumont probably assumed that Nora was a vulnerable and easy target.

Mum narrowed her eyes at Nora, then shifted her gaze to Mr. Beaumont.

A pleased smile emerged. “We mustn’t risk harming your voice.” Mum closed the fallboard of the piano and swiveled on the bench.

Of course, Mum would assume attraction where there was none. Well, maybe not none. Nora could appreciate a handsome man without falling prey to his schemes. Still, the last thing she needed was Mum getting any matchmaking ideas. Father was bad enough.

A meow drew her attention toward Mr. Beaumont’s basket. Had he brought—

A gray streak shot out from the basket and scaled the back of the sofa with cloth-rending strength.

Good gracious! Not only was the beast ill-behaved, it was the most disagreeable-looking cat she’d ever seen. Two torn ears, one eye, and a yowl declared it more feral than domestic. It wouldn’t surprise her if foam started bubbling at the corners of its mouth. She pushed Mum back and blocked her from attack.

Mr. Beaumont dropped the basket and grabbed the cat by the scruff. He tugged the claws free, earning a swipe at his face for his troubles.

Fortunately, Mr. Beaumont’s beard served as a shield. The cat dangled with its tail flicking back and forth. Was it . . . growling? She’d never heard a cat growl before, but the creature was most definitely voicing its displeasure in one.

“Dr. Chalfant will not approve of your bringing a cat, especially one as ill-mannered as that.” Nurse Abbott frowned at the unhappy feline.

Nora didn’t approve of the animal either. The poor manners of Flossie’s puppy did little to endear him to Nora, but at least Harold was cute. This creature looked like it’d lost a fight with a dog and was ready to take out its losses on anyone close enough to scratch. She guided Mum to a chair as far away from Mr. Beaumont and his beast as possible.

“Dr. Chalfant suggested I bring something that would entice Ma to recover so she can come home. Tristan’s her favorite.”

If that was Mr. Beaumont’s enticement to bring his mum home, did the man secretly wish her to never return?

Nurse Abbott didn’t appear pleased, but she signaled to another nurse in the hall to take her place. “I’ll return with your mother shortly.”

Nora didn’t trust the cat to not escape its master, so she angled her chair to keep them both in view.

“I want you to bring my copy of Zelmira next week.” Mum spoke much too loudly for the small room. “I think ‘Riedi al soglio’ would be a wonderful piece to add to your repertoire.”

Though Mr. Beaumont pretended to be occupied with calming the cat into compliance, his tilted head indicated he eavesdropped. Hope-fully he was opera illiterate and had no idea of what Mum spoke.

Still, redirecting the conversation away from singing and music was prudent. “Did I tell you Lydia has a contract for a new story? It’s her first one since the whole Dupin debacle.”

Fear tightened the edges of Mum’s eyes, and Nora immediately regretted the choice of topic. Reminding Mum of the vigilante who brought Lydia Pelton’s crime novels to life through murder and then kidnapped Lydia was as foolish as stepping in front of a carriage. Now Nora had to scramble to prevent disaster. Mum was already feeling the crush of fear.

“Do you think it is safe for her to write? That that man won’t come after her or, worse”—she gripped Nora’s arm—“you because you’re her friend?”

Nora patted Mum’s hand. “It is safe for Lydia to write anything she pleases. That man has been captured and awaits the fulfillment of his sentencing. Neither he nor anyone else will harm me. Besides, Lydia writes mostly romances now, and the only one likely to bring her stories to life is her fiancé.”

Lydia’s euphoria of her whirlwind romance with Detective Abraham Hall influenced her every conversation and plan. Truly, Nora was happy for Lydia, but she couldn’t help the twinge of bitterness Abraham’s presence created. The addition of a man to the Guardians had changed interactions and how they fought for those who couldn’t defend themselves. Abraham was a good man, but his determination to safeguard the Guardians meant their clandestine adventures had mostly diminished to social visits and reminiscing of past escapades.

A pained grunt from Mr. Beaumont snapped Nora’s attention back to him. The cat darted directly toward Nora while Mr. Beaumont shook out his hand. Before she could determine what the cat planned, it leaped onto her lap. With a purr of satisfaction, it bumped against her chest, then her hand. The beast’s sharp claws poked through the material as it anchored itself in place and continued butting its head against her. After seeing what the feline had attempted to do to Mr. Beaumont’s face, Nora had no intention of touching it. So much for her months of successfully avoiding conversation with the man. If she wanted to escape unscathed, she’d need to appeal to him directly.

“Mr. Beaumont, I need your assistance, please.”

A note from Courtney: doesn’t that intrigue you?! I am excited this is on my TBR! And since I’m a cat person, I am quite enamored already with Tristan.

To keep reading the rest of the excerpts on the blog tour AND to enter the giveaway, please click the graphic below to navigate to the author’s giveaway page.

Thank you SO much for taking the time to visit the blog today! I hope you have an enjoyable weekend.

Review: “Beyond the Clouds” by Elizabeth Camden

Review: “Beyond the Clouds” by Elizabeth Camden

Thanks for dropping by to hear about Elizabeth Camden’s recent historical romance release, Beyond the Clouds.

About the Book

They lost each other once before; now the clouds of war may give them a second chance.

Book cover of Beyond the Clouds by Elizabeth Camden, featuring a couple embracing in the foreground with a castle-like fortress in a foggy background and a bluish cloudy sky.

As teenagers, Delia Byrne and Finn Delaney fell in love while flying kites and dreaming of a future together–until betrayal tore them apart. Now, as America enters World War I, Delia works for peace as a paralegal and pacifist. Her values forbid her from supporting the war effort, but she volunteers for a relief organization trying to save millions of lives in famine-stricken Belgium.

Returning to America as a decorated war hero, Finn is eager to get back to the front but is assigned to use his fame to raise funds instead. Little does he know that this mission will bring him face-to-face with Delia, the only woman he ever loved and once hoped to marry. As their shared mission draws them together, old sparks of romance begin to stir–until duty sends them behind enemy lines in occupied Belgium. Will the greatest danger be the conflict raging around them–or the possibility of falling in love again?

Goodreads | Amazon

Review

Beyond the Clouds by Elizabeth Camden concludes her “Women of Midtown” trilogy with the story of Delia, another tenant in the famed Martha Washington complex in New York City. What begins as a benevolent homefront campaign reunites Delia with her former childhood friend and first love, Finn Delaney, now a hero and even more a threat to her carefully guarded heart.

This story offers a fascinating perspective and details of the Belgian relief efforts ongoing throughout WWI with a few real historical characters making appearances. When Delia and Finn reluctantly join forces for a greater cause, sparks fly and old wounds resurface. I love how their dynamic brings a history with it and causes friction reminiscent of an enemies-to-lovers trope alongside their second-chance romance. Instead of bringing their individual bitterness into their present, their reunion quickly grows into a rekindled friendship and stronger connection. The frightful circumstances of war are a catalyst for both their reconnection and to reveal the depth of their feelings for each other.

I appreciate the way Camden’s stories are rooted in real-life history and challenges, sparking curiosity for the facts and heroic true-life individuals at the heart of everyday life.

My thanks to the publisher for the ebook review copy. I purchased an audiobook copy for my collection. This is my honest review.

Top Ten Tuesday: 10 Books with Pilot Main Characters

It’s another Top Ten Tuesday, hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl!

Today’s official topic is a Genre Freebie! Thanks to the book I’m currently reading, Claire Holloway is Winging It, I’m inspired to do spin on this topic with less of a genre focus and more of a character focus. My list features main characters whose profession includes piloting airplanes! These span genres and settings from early 1900s to today, but they all include a bit of romance in the storyline. Some of them are still on my TBR 🙂

It’s interesting to see these covers all together. Some clearly feature an airplane or indicate a pilot’s presence in the story, others don’t.

10 Books with Pilot Main Characters

Beyond the Clouds by Elizabeth Camden

Claire Holloway is Winging It by Angela Ruth Strong | My current read, featuring a pilot hero and a flight attendant heroine!

All of You by Sarah Monzon

The Aviator’s Lady by Gabrielle Meyer

High as the Heavens by Kate Breslin

Walking on Hidden Wings by Rachel Scott McDaniel

On Wings of Devotion by Roseanna M. White

The Sky Above Us by Sarah Sundin

Brunch at Bittersweet Cafe by Carla Laureano

Wild Montana Skies by Susan May Warren

How did you participate in the freebie TTT this week? Have you read any of these stories? Do you have a penchant for reading about a certain profession?

Mini Review: The Belle of Chatham by Laura Frantz

The start of a new year (typically) means a new novel from Laura Frantz, always a must-read author. Today I’m sharing about her latest, The Belle of Chatham.

About the Book

In 1777, caught in the crossroads of the American Revolution, sisters Maebel and Coralie Bohannon’s quaint New Jersey village becomes a battleground as they house American officers in their home. Rebellion ripples through their family as members take opposing sides–Patriots and Loyalists–causing a deep chasm that fractures their once-unbreakable bond.

As Mae’s friendship grows with the American general Rhys Harlow, Coralie continues her liaison with her childhood sweetheart, a British officer stationed in New York. Torn between her growing love for the general and suspicion that her sister is a British spy, Mae leaves the only home she’s ever known for the New York frontier. When betrayal strikes in the heart of the wilderness, she’s forced to take a perilous journey that tests her very survival and those she loves, all in the name of liberty.

Proclaimed “wordsmith extraordinaire” by Library Journal, Laura Frantz delivers a stirring tale of divided loyalties, sisterhood, and love.

Review

The Belle of Chatham is another top-tier historical romance from Laura Frantz’s pen. Its timely setting of the American Revolution and America’s 250th birthday this year make for a reading experience honoring the real figures of the Revolution and the what-ifs of a poignant romance.

The story of Mae and Rhys is QUITE the romance and journey! From the turmoil and division in a home community to the frontlines of battle, Frantz offers perspectives of daily life in a time far removed from today but connected by human experience, grief, and longing. This story, like her whole catalog, encourages an empathic view of humanity and the grace afforded through a Savior that can be shared with others. The love story at its heart unfolds in stolen quiet moments and acts of honor. The family ties and secondary characters bring even more heart, humor, and intrigue to the tale. This story will inspire and transport history lovers to a pivotal time in American history.

Review: “Meet Me in Virginia” by Elizabeth Camden

Today’s review features a new series-starting novel by Elizabeth Camden: Meet Me in Virginia. Her second foray into a contemporary novel world, this book enchants and captivates as it weaves a contemporary romance that will appeal to fans of Courtney Walsh and Becky Wade.

About the Book

She believes in elegance and tradition. He’s all about grit and smashing through obstacles. Together, they’re a disaster waiting to happen—or the perfect match.

Alice Chadwick, a history professor devoted to the genteel values of Jane Austen’s world, has spent her career championing kindness and mannerly comportment in a cutthroat academic environment. But her dream of elevating Austen’s ideals is on the brink of collapse—her colleagues want her fired, and a scandal threatens to ruin her completely.

Enter Jack Latimer, a world-renowned golf course architect with zero patience for old-world charm. He’s brash, bold, and determined to build his masterpiece on a valuable stretch of Virginia property—even if it means demolishing the historic building Alice hopes could save her career.

When their clashing goals spark fiery confrontations, neither is prepared for the unexpected discovery hidden on the property—a find that could save them both if they can stop bickering long enough to work together. As their partnership deepens, so does the inconvenient attraction simmering between them. Will their undeniable chemistry lead to a happily-ever-after—or will their differences derail them both?

Goodreads | Amazon

Review

Meet Me in Virginia by Elizabeth Camden is an enchanting contemporary romance story with a remarkable Williamsburg setting. Its pairing of Alice and Jack, true opposites in background and personality, is captivating from the start. A subtle historical thread influences the story, a regional mystery of sorts that Alice seeks to solve. Its presence is an apt feature for the author, who is already established as a historical fiction storyteller. I always appreciate her stories for her portrayal of and respect for history — evident in *this* tale in the echoes and influence history has on the present.

One of the things I appreciate the most about this story is Camden’s unique characterization approach. Alice and Jack have nontypical, fascinating careers: academics with a penchant for history, and golf course architecture & design. They are well established on the page with depth and vibrancy, making me (as a reader) feel like I know their personal preferences and demeanors by the end of the story. His no-nonsense approach to life and her penchant for nostalgia and cooking are two such characteristics.

I love how this romantic pairing explores how Jack and Alice challenge each other to see the world differently — to be better versions of themselves. Their moments in the story together are marked by sharp banter and romantic chemistry, unfolding in a way that proves their intellectual match. Jack is undeniably hero material and totally my type. I appreciate and respect how Camden can write beta and alpha heroes with such complexity and realness to them, making me fictionally fall for both in different stories (I’m referencing Count Dimitri Sokolov, king of the beta heroes).

Meet Me in Virginia is very much a romance, but it also has deep themes of reconciliation, legacy, and hope. The historical element and family influences play into these themes to make this story to get caught up in. This is Camden’s second foray into a contemporary novel world, and the promising start of a series I am anticipating! Book 2 is set to feature Alice’s intriguing brother, whom we meet briefly in this one. I think this contemporary romance will appeal to fans of Courtney Walsh and Becky Wade.

For part of my reading, I listened to the audiobook production via my local library’s app. It is highly recommended! The narrator does a fantastic job embodying the characters and a few southern accents.

My thanks to the publisher for the ebook review copy. I purchased a finalized copy for my collection. This is my honest review.

A Few of My Favorite Books of 2025

A Few of My Favorite Books of 2025

It’s that time of year again! I’m linking up with Top Ten Tuesday today to share my “best books of 2025” topic list, in a fashion that’s become a favorite tradition.

Yesterday, I shared a Few of My Favorite Things of 2025, wherein I talk about bookish things, popular blog posts, and some favorite MOVIES I watched in 2025.

2025 was quite the year for me! Personally, it was full of joys, accomplishments, a little travel, and lots of “busy” in between. I did quite a bit of reading, though not everything achieved a bookish post here on the blog. I set a Goodreads goal of 70 books and almost made it! I read 64 and counting, more than last year’s 61. You can see my whole Year in Books on Goodreads. I enjoyed rereading some this year, particularly a few Laura Frantz titles. Interestingly, I read more historical novels than contemporary, and my favs list reflects this. My most-read authors were: Tamara Leigh (7 books), Laura Frantz (5 books), and a tie between Mimi Matthews and Nichole Van (4 each).

As is my own tradition, I’m keeping it simple by linking to my review in the title (if I have written one) and sharing 3 memorable things about each story.

Without further ado, here’s my list!

Best Books I read in 2025

The Redeeming by Tamara Leigh

Danger & alliances. Grace. A knight-hero with a “my wife” line.

The Indigo Heiress by Laura Frantz

A cherished painted miniature. Hope. Black ribbon.

The Fur Trader’s Lady by Gabrielle Meyer

Frontier. Tent conversations. Pining.

A Sea View Christmas by Julie Klassen

Second chance with a Scot. Christmas traditions. Auld Lang Syne.

A Tartan Love by Nichole Van

Romantic sparks. Honor. Memory.

Rules for Ruin by Mimi Matthews

Honey and currants. Bloody Hertfordshire.  Dragonflies.

When Stars Light the Sky by Elizabeth Camden

Britannica. Oatmeal. You-get-under-my-skin rivals to lovers.

One Final Turn by Ashley Weaver

Keys. (Kissing) hotel neighbors. Lisbon.

Kate Landry Has a Plan by Rebekah Millet

Depth. Hilarity. Beignets.

An Overdue Match by Sarah Monzon

Library. (Not so) bad boy. Tenderness.

Have you read any of the books or authors on my list this year? What “best of” things did you share for Top Ten Tuesday this week?

A Few of My Favorite Things of 2025

It’s hard to believe it’s the start of 2026! The year 2025 was busy (the good kind), full of “normal”, and moments of fun + laughter. Like any year, it had its share of hard and messy, but the Lord is ever-faithful through it all.

Thanks for stopping by to read what’s on my mind and a few highlights of my year. We’ll start with a few snippets of bookish-related things, look at popular posts here on the blog from 2025, and talk about some fantastic things I watched in 2025.

Tomorrow I’ll be back with a list of Favorite Books of 2025!

Bookish Things

I am all about bookish reasons to do things! One huge bookish thing I did, along with my mom, was travel to a destination from a favorite book. This came with rereading the book and dreaming of travel options. The book: The Seamstress of Acadie by Laura Frantz. The place: Nova Scotia, Canada. It happened last fall, and it was a trip of a lifetime to see and experience the sights, history, and today’s culture. I plan to share another post about this soon!

Another bookish thing I did recently was to make a recipe for the New Year’s holiday because I read about it. The book: A Sea View Christmas. The dish: a Scottish Black Bun (pastry-wrapped fruitcake).

Film Favorites

One of these is a rewatch and three of them were released in earlier years, but they made my list! 🙂 If you’re on Letterboxd, you can see my watch list and follow my film reviews there.

Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning (2025) Perhaps the final installment in the franchise, this film DELIVERED. It has epic action (we all know it’s over the top, but that’s why the fans love it), a meaningful core friendship group, and some eerily prescient world conflicts.

Freakier Friday (2025) This one is ALL about the nostalgia, and it delivers. My fav moment involves Jamie Lee Curtis’ character and chocolate chips.

F1: The Movie (2025) Brad Pitt, real race cars, a must-listen Christ Stapleton song in the soundtrack, and a comeback story that escapes predictability in the best way. This one is probably my fav new 2025 film of the year.

Bohemian Rhapsody (2018) AND A Complete Unknown (2024) Both movie biopics, both completely different genres. Brilliant, impressive leading actors.

Little Women (2019) This was a rewatch, but it stunned me again concerning its pacing, two timelines of storytelling, and cast. I was reminded of the unique open-ended potential with which the ending *could* be viewed. I think it’s a must-watch only after the viewer is familiar with the plot and characters through reading or watching another adaptation because it becomes more impactful and easier to follow.

Popular #ontheblog in 2025

Most popular new posts:

Most popular new book reviews:

I wish you a happy new year! Thank you for taking the time to visit my corner of the internet this year. Please chime in and share any favorites list you’ve compiled or about anything you loved in 2025.

Christmas Reading Update

Christmas Reading Update

First off, I want to wish you a Merry Christmas holiday! Thank you for taking time to read my thoughts here noe and throughout the year. I pray you are remembering the JOY of this season and the gift of grace we have available to us because of Christ’s birth.

Now, on to the books! This post contains my ramblings, thoughts on books I’ve read recently, highlighting new and old favorites, and seasonal stories.

I’ve been reading new stories and rereading some beloved favs recently. I’m all about Christmas stories this time of year, so I’ve managed to enjoy a few of them. The standout favorite this year is A Sea View Christmas by Julie Klassen, a book I could LIVE inside of! It highlights olden Christmas traditions of the Regency era and incorporates a little Scottish cultural tradition, which is a delight. The story itself wraps up a great series (with a series-long anticipated romance) I finally finished– I recommend bingeing the stories of the Summers sisters because the whole series is published!

Other Christmas stories I’ve read and enjoyed include About Last Christmas (reviewed here!), Snowed Inn, A Very English Christmas (3 novellas), and The Christmas Promise.

I’m revisiting The Mistletoe Countess by Pepper Basham currently and LOVING it again! It has all the humor and cheek of a Basham story with a marriage of convenience trope, a steady mystery, and a British hero paired with an effusive American heroine.

I’ve also reread a few Laura Frantz stories this year. I enjoyed The Lacemaker again this month, an apt story because I also was enthralled by Ken Burns’ new docuseries The American Revolution. I hope this post or list inspires you to pick up a new story or a beloved favorite this season.

Review: “The Marriage Method” by Mimi Matthews

Review: “The Marriage Method” by Mimi Matthews

Thanks for visiting today. One of my MOST anticipated books for late this year was The Marriage Method by Mimi Matthews. It’s the second in The Crinoline Academy series and features a marriage of convenience trope! Read on for more of my thoughts.

About the Book

The Academy always comes first . . . which makes marriage to its most formidable adversary an exceedingly inconvenient arrangement.

Well removed from London’s more curious eyes, the Benevolent Academy for the Betterment of Young Ladies strives toward one clandestine to distract, disrupt, and discredit men in power who would seek to harm the advancement of women—by appropriate means, of course.

When intrepid newspaper editor Miles Quincy starts to question the school’s intentions, the Academy appoints Penelope “Nell” Trewlove, one of their brightest graduates, to put this nuisance to rest. An easy enough mission, she supposes. Or it would be, if Miles wasn’t so fascinating—too fascinating to resist—and if Nell’s visit to London didn’t perfectly coincide with the murder of one of Miles’s reporters.

When the inexorable claws of fate trap Nell and Miles in a compromising situation, they agree to an arrangement that will save their reputations while enabling them to investigate the story that led to a man’s death, as well as the surprising chemistry between them…

Goodreads | Amazon

Review

The Marriage Method is a new marriage of convenience with a hint of mystery to swoon over by Mimi Matthews! I love how each of her stories continue to be unique, riveting, and oh-so-clever. This one focuses on a match I was highly anticipating between characters I had already met in Rules for Ruin: Miles and Nell. The beloved couple from that story, Effie and Gabriel, make a few appearances, too.

The Marriage Method expertly includes several tropes to enjoy, starting with the marriage of convenience and all the forced proximity that comes with it. Other tropes include a little bit of grumpy-sunshine, sick care opportunities, and only one bed! Miles has moments where his protective nature and “My wife” energy shine, along with him being a cat dad! Nell’s upbringing and physical challenges present opportunities for tenderness, empathy, and emotion – and some great fun concerning her needlework hobby (IYKYK).

My fav aspect of their romantic match is how Miles gradually becomes Nell’s safe space. He learns to shoulder her burdens and protect her because he WANTS to, not because she is without fortitude, strength, and intelligence, which he wonderfully acknowledges in different ways. I also love how they talk through any trifles or misunderstandings — a hallmark of a realistic story, and a characteristic Matthews’ stories often set the standard for. I also appreciate how loyalty and commitment are the major crux of the theme, playing out both in their romance and with tangential characters.

Content note: a few very mild expletives, perilous situations. I would call this closed door or door slightly cracked open — one such scene is described tastefully with no explicit detail, perhaps cautionary for young readers.

Thank you to the publisher for the Netgalley ARC. I purchased an ebook copy of my own, also. This is my honest review.

Review: “About Last Christmas” by Rachel Scott McDaniel

October starts my favorite quarter of the year — all the fall and Christmas things! So, I was perfectly in the mood to read this new book by Rachel Scott McDaniel: About Last Christmas. A contemporary story is a new subgenre for Rachel, whose historical tales I have enjoyed.

About the Book

She’s trying to avoid a holiday disaster. He’s trying to earn his way off her naughty list. Both need a Christmas Miracle.

Greta Carlton is beautifully content running her antique shop in the snow-globe town of Silver Creek, sipping vanilla gingerbread lattes, and staying clear of drama. But a whirlwind encounter with a handsome stranger leads to a whimsical evening, stirring her heart to believe in movie-style romance. That is, until Leo disappears into thin (and snowy) air. Ten months later, he walks into her shop like the Ghost of Christmas Last, needing a favor.

She’s still mad.
He’s still charming.

Greta doesn’t have time for men with dimpled grins and the proclivity for vanishing. She’s got her own holiday project with an approaching deadline. Though the more she learns about Leo, the more she realizes he’s the only thing standing between her and a Christmas catastrophe. They agree to help each other reach their holiday goals. As they untangle feelings as stubborn as knotted Christmas lights, Greta wonders if second chances are like antiques—unexpected, imperfect, and everything you didn’t know you were looking for.

About Last Christmas is a sweet holiday romance wrapped in witty banter, heartfelt twists, and the dreamy thrill of finding love in the glow of twinkling lights.

Review

About Last Christmas has a damsel in distress, snow, sledding, tree-trimming, and twinkle light kisses. A balance of humor and community and sweatpants. It also has a charming (or comically deranged, depending on your sense of humor — which I mean in the most complimentary way) setting for the “only one bed” trope. Elements of healing and understanding are a significant part of Greta’s journey I appreciated, themes that overflow into all of her relationships.

In the story, the tiniest details come full circle! My favorite aspects are similar to things I happen to love about McDaniel’s historical novels, too: WIT and a strong sense of identity for the characters. The story is told entirely from Greta’s first-person POV, a viewpoint that allows Leo to play the hero with a smart, enigmatic, and selfless charm. The romance is set up with a hilarious meet-cute and extends to a second chance situation that allows for some mystery, sweet tension, and fantastic grand gestures.

My thanks to the publisher for the ebook review copy. This is my honest review.