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multiverse-ofbookreviews · 8 years ago
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The Captain’s Daughter [Note: This book was provided free of charge by Bethany House Publishing. All thoughts and opinions are my own.]
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By: Jennifer Delamere
Length: 352 pages
Acquired: Bethany Publishing House
Publisher: Bethany Publishing House
Language: English
Setting: An 1880 Victorian romance in London, England.
The Story: Rosalyn Bernay an orphan since the age of 9 learned both the kindness and cruelty of England after she aged out of the orphanage she lived at with her two sisters. Mile's away working as a service maid or rather a companion she began to enjoy life outside of the orphanage with her employer Mrs. Haufman. Until one day her world starts to crumble, Rosalyn escapes her occupation and runs off to see her sister in a few towns over. As she arrived at the train station her employer right behind she decides to hop on a train to London to escape her sketchy past. When she arrived in London, she is then robbed, tricked, and ends up penniless outside of a theater. However, every time things went wrong, Nate Moran is right there trying to help her.
Nate Moran, a trained soldier in the British army, returns home after a recovering from an injury he got while on orders in India. As he heals, he works tirelessly to provide for his family as a hand stage and a worker at the stables. As he returned to London he finds Rosalyn Bernay, each time she had found herself in danger, Nate was near concerned about her wellbeing. Nate had a sketchy past love that caused him to be fearful of Rosalyn. Although he couldn’t help the growing feelings, he felt for her. Nate pushes aside the feelings he felt towards Rosalyn and focused on healing to return to India and be as far away from Rosalyn as possible.
Rosalyn believed that God will always provide what she needs. Nate believed in God but, his troubled past made it difficult for Nate to rely on Him. Maybe, just maybe Rosalyn’s belief that God will always provide what she needs…could be Nate Moran.
The Review:
I loved reading this book! The beginning could be misleading from the actual story. It started off in Dartmoor Coast, 1873 outside of the Orphanage Rosalyn was leaving to start her life as a maid. The author then introduced her sister's Car and Julia, Rosalyn being the oldest. One may begin to assume the story could be about the sisters and their struggles that brought them to the Orphanage but, the book included much MORE than I could handle. Time skipped into her escape from her employer. I immediately was drawn into the story; many questions were popping into my head. So the story is about the eldest sister? Why is she running? I loved the time jump. It began to get more interesting very quickly! As she began to escape, it started Nate’s story. What I found most that I loved about reading this story, how Jennifer included the presence of God. In every aspect of this story, God was there, and he was beautiful, understanding, and forgiving. Despite the trouble, she faced while in London, God indeed provide and she found herself in the home of Nate Moran himself as well as his family. Through God’s work, Rosalyn found work as a dresser in a Theatre where she found her dream career. There wasn’t anything I didn’t like in this book. The exciting parts ended tastefully in this story, Nate’s peace with his past, Rosalyn clears up her predicament, because of His guidance. I also enjoyed how the women were described as respectable, innocent,  women. Despite the circumstances, life has provided because of the grace of God all was healed, and life was prosperous. Nate and Rosalyn’s relationship grew into an extraordinary one. Jennifer did wonderfully allow their relationship to grow slowly instead of an instant starstruck kind of love. Don’t get me wrong, attraction and feelings were there but, it evolved over time rather than a typical romance novel that happens instantaneously. Nate presented himself in Rosalyn’s life as a knight in shining armor trying to protect her from the rough streets of London. Despite some setbacks and finally ending at the home of Nate Moran thanks to his joyous Godly family their relationship blooms. Rosalyn innocence made it difficult to understand her feelings for Nate. And Nate’s past heartbreak made it hard for him to accept a new woman in his life. Through their moments together as they walked home, at the theater, and the little ways Nate shows his love for Rosalyn it was throw music where she was able to see his soul. From then on she knew she was in love with the Celtic soldier. The suspense built up to their first kiss on the last two pages of the book was FANTASTIC! It was what a noble, respectable gentleman and lady would act. It was refreshing to read a romance filled with the promise of forever without the explicit descriptions of anything happening more than simple conversation and admiration. WELL DONE MAAM!
Rate: 5/5
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drrus · 6 years ago
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Shiela Walsh: It's Okay Not To Be Okay
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At 17 years of age, I started my radio career. Back then - the early 1980's - my first radio gig was the Sunday Morning Gospel Show on CJBQ in Belleville, Ontario, Canada. In those days the show consisted initially of George Beverly Shea, Kate Smith and others in the similar genre. Little did I know then, just how influential Christian music would be in my life as a friend slowly started introducing me to other artists I could play during the show. One of those artists included Shiela Walsh. I suddenly found myself discovering the world of Contemporary Christian Music. It's interesting how God works as I've moved from promoting her music on radio, to having an opportunity to promote her new book here. It's Okay Not To Be Okay: Moving Forward One Day at a Time by Shiela Walsh is due for release in October 2018. It is my honor and privilege to welcome Shiela Walsh as a guest post author on this website. The material found here is reposted from her website, with permission from Shiela Walsh. Enjoy! Dr. Rus Guest Post Shiela Walsh is a powerful communicator, Bible teacher, and bestselling author with more than 5 million books sold. She is the author of the award-winning Gigi, God's Little Princess and In the Middle of the Mess. She is cohost of LIFE Today with James and Betty Robison and her Wednesdays in the Word program, with more than 100 million viewers. Walsh is a popular speaker and Bible teacher around the world. She lives in Dallas, Texas, with her husband, Barry, their son, Christian, and their three pups, Belle, Tink, and Maggie.
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It’s Okay Not to be Okay: Excerpt the Introduction I wish I could take my twenty-one-year-old (recovering-from teenage-acne) face in my hands and tell her, “It’s okay not to be okay, I promise.” Would she have believed me? I don’t think so. She was determined to get everything right. It started with a photograph. I was cleaning out drawers the other day and found an old photograph under a roll of Christmas paper. I sat down on the sofa and studied the picture. I’m in a white dress and a graduation gown, twenty-one years old, graduating from seminary. My hair is short and dark. It had taken about three years to recover from my experiment with a perm that left me looking like a pack of dogs had assumed my hair was lunch. In the photograph I’m smiling, confident, ready to take on the world for Jesus. My heart aches. There’s so much I’d like to tell her. “Moisturize your neck! You’ll thank me later!” If I had only ten minutes, I’d cut to the chase. I’d tell her this will not be the life she imagined. I’d tell her that she will disappoint people and they will disappoint her, but she’ll learn from it. I’d let her know that she’ll fall down over and over again, but rather than understanding the love of God less she’ll get it more. I’d let her know her heart is going to break, but she’ll survive and it will change how she sees people, not as causes to be saved but as people to be loved. I’d let her know that sometimes the night will get very dark, but she will never be alone even when she’s absolutely convinced she is. I’d let her know that she’s loved. I’d tell her to get rid of her punishing list of things she thinks she needs to get right. I lived so much of my life with a list of things to change, to do better—if not on paper then in my mind. I think most of us do, and the message is always the same: we can do better. We’ll not only join the gym, we’ll go! This new diet plan will work and by summer we’ll be bikini ready. (Note to self: don’t you dare buy a bikini. Even if you’re thinner, things are not where they used to be and no one but your loving husband needs to know that.) We’ll start that read-through-the-Bible-in-a-year plan again. (Last year I got to May 7 and got distracted, and by the time I realized it, I was a whole Leviticus, fifty-three Psalms, and Romans behind.) We’ll recover from the overspending and be financially responsible. We’ll cook wholesome, nutritious meals for our family and sit down at least five nights a week together at the table. We’ll reduce our television watching and read more books. But sometimes the messages carry much more weight. This marriage will work. We will get out of debt. Our children will come back to Christ. We’ll eat better to save our lives not our waistlines. I don’t know what your internal list looks like, but if it’s anything like mine it usually serves to let us know where we’ve failed. Lists are written when the kids are asleep or you’ve had a good night’s sleep and a cup of coffee. The trouble is, the kids wake up and that impossible woman you work with gets louder and more obnoxious by the minute and no amount of coffee is going to help. And what about our spiritual lives? That can be the most judgmental list of all. When we assume that God’s love is based on our behavior we’ve set ourselves up for a devastating fall. I’ll pray more. I’ll share my faith at work. I’ll read my Bible from Genesis to the maps in the back of the book. I’ll trust God without questioning. So, why did I title this book It’s Okay Not to Be Okay? These words might sound a bit like a bumper sticker to you, but they don’t to me. I want you to know that these words were fought for. They could sound like the waving of a white flag, six words of surrender, but they’re not. For me they are words of victory! I’ve let go of beating myself up trying to live a life that Jesus never asked me to live. The life my “fresh out of seminary, determined to save the world, to love the unlovely, get nine hours of sleep every night and never let God down” self tried to live for so long. I don’t know where you’re at in life as you read this, but if I could sit down with you for a while, I’d say, “Take a deep breath in and hold it for five seconds, and then let it out. Again. Again.” Then I’d tell you that it really is okay not to be okay. That’s why Jesus came. I gave my life to Him when I was eleven years old. As I write, I’m sixty-one. That’s fifty years of falling down and getting back up. Fifty years of trying to be worth loving. Fifty years of doing the same things over and over, hoping they’d turn out differently this time. (Yes, I do know that’s the definition of insanity.) Here’s the great news: It’s also fifty years of the faithfulness of God and this beautiful invitation from Christ: Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly. (Matt. 11:28–30 Message) What a lovely place to start again, side by side with Jesus, learning to live freely and lightly. I read an old Chinese proverb that said, “The best time to plant a tree was twenty years ago. The second-best time is now.” I like that. Those are hope-filled words. They say that we get to start again and again and again. No matter what’s true in your life at this moment, I want to remind you that God loves you, right now, no matter what’s going on around or inside you. These words may fall flat for you right now if you find yourself in an unfamiliar place, a difficult season. Perhaps you’re facing the end of a marriage and you either feel like a failure or that you’ve been betrayed and abandoned. You may be facing an empty nest and have no idea what your life should revolve around now. Perhaps you have lost a loved one and the very idea of moving forward not only seems impossible, it feels wrong. You may think, I’ve done this before. I’ve tried to start again and it didn’t work... Or perhaps, if you’re honest, you are just too tired to try. I understand that. I’ve been there. I’d like to simply say, gently, you were made for more. You are worth fighting for. Christ thought you were worth dying for. Would you be willing to open your heart to the possibility of moving forward, one day at a time? Life rarely offers quick fixes; it’s a process, and God is in it with us, all the way. He doesn’t look for perfection in us; He sees that in Christ. You don’t need to be okay because Jesus has made you all right. He’s paid the bill in full. He’s covered our “not okay-ness.” Okay doesn’t live here, but Jesus does. All He looks for in us is a willingness to take the next step. Read more here: Take the First Step Part One Take the First Step Part Two It's Okay Not to Be Okay - Available from Baker Books - Click Here Much love, Shiela Walsh Special thanks to Graf-Martin Communications for connecting me with Shiela Walsh.
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lesacap12 · 8 years ago
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I'm currently reading The Ebb Tide by Beverly Lewis thanks to #bethanyhousepublishers and #bakerpublishing. I love how Beverly Lewis' tells her stories! #theebbtide #beverlylewis #christianfiction #freetoreview
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bookqueen5-blog · 6 years ago
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"We Hope For Better Things" ~Erin Bartels~ Review
"We Hope For Better Things" ~Erin Bartels~ #bookreviews #bookreview #revellpublishing #fiction #historicalfiction #bakerpublishing #bookblogger #bookblog #blogger #blog #blogginglife
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Synopsis:
When Detroit Free Press reporter Elizabeth Balsam meets James Rich, his strange request–that she look up a relative she didn’t know she had in order to deliver an old camera and a box of photos–seems like it isn’t worth her time. But when she loses her job after a botched investigation, she suddenly finds herself with nothing but time.
At her great-aunt’s 150-year-old farmhouse,…
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marcel334 · 5 years ago
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The New York TimesBy Sheryl Gay Stolberg, Maggie Haberman and Peter BakerPublished Sept. 29, 2019Updated Sept. 30, 2019, 8:52 a.m. ET--------------------------
EVEN WHEN HE KNEW IT WAS NOT TRUE.
Thomas P. Bossert, President Trump's first homeland security adviser, said he was "deeply disturbed" that Mr. Trump had urge Ukraine to investigate Democrats.  A theory that was "completely debunked".
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lesacap12 · 8 years ago
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Up next! Murder on the Moor by Julianna Deering! Thanks to #bakerpublishing #bethanybooks for the chance to read and review! #murderonthemoor #juliannadeering #gotitfree
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drrus · 6 years ago
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Book Review: Fully Alive
Guest Post Book Reviewer Shandy Wheaton is not only an avid reader, but also a worshipper and one who chases after God with all of her heart, soul, mind and strength. About The Book In this eye-opening book, Susie Larson shows how intertwined our emotional, spiritual, and physical health are. Spiritual difficulties can have physical consequences, and physical illnesses can have emotional and even spiritual ramifications. So in order for true healing to occur, it must happen holistically--mind, body, and spirit.
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Providing a fresh vision of what a flourishing life is, Susie shares practical, biblical ways to: replace defeating thoughts with redemptive ones overcome stress and embrace God's peace deal with the "I can’ts" embedded in our soul trade unhealthy habits for new life-giving practices We cannot keep ignoring the mental and/or emotional symptoms trying to get our attention. Fully Alive is an uplifting guide for anyone who longs to know the health, freedom, and wholeness that Jesus wants for us. About the Author Susie Larson is a popular media voice, author, and national speaker. A veteran of the fitness field, she has twice been voted a top-ten finalist for the John C. Maxwell Transformational Leadership Award. Susie and her husband live near Minneapolis, Minnesota. Release Date: October 2018 Book Review When I picked up this book to read, I at first thought it would be “another book about not having enough faith to be healed”.  Reading it however, I found a book unlike any other surrounding the topic of “Learning to flourish - Mind, Body & Spirit”.  Susie Larson uses some of her own story of dealing with illness to help guide the reader in some practical tools for changing the way you think, speak and act in the midst of your struggle and the impact those things can have on how your body aligns with the word and truth of God. Being someone dealing with a chronic illness, I was able to work through the different sections of questions: Pursue Healing -Pray for a miracle – offers a focus theme with scripture, ending with a Prayer surrounding that theme Soul Searching – Gives truth in scripture, as well as questions about how it applies to your life. Spiritual Reset – Uses the acronym PRAISE to guide you through Prayer. Digging Deeper – Gives more scripture dedicated to the theme, followed by deeper questions causing you to go deeper. These tools allow you to reflect on your life, read scripture, and dig deep. This book was an easy read! Highly recommend anyone going through trials or struggles to pick this up, not just to read, but work through to help navigate through the pain.  You can go as deep as you want with it. Fully Alive - Available on Christian Book Dot Com - Click Here Enjoy the read! Shandy Wheaton Special thanks to Graf-Martin Communications for supplying review copy.
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