Thursday, April 9, 2026

BFCG’s 13th Birthday Celebration



With twelve years behind me of birthday posts, it’s probably a fair guess to say that I’m nearly out of words to describe my thankfulness for everyone who has supported BFCG throughout these last thirteen years. However! I truly am so thankful for every single person who has supported BFCG through reading our reviews, sharing the site, and voicing your desire for Philippians 4:8-worthy books. “Thank you so much!” doesn’t seem like enough, but sincerely, thank you so very much for being here! ðŸ’—
 

While some might not think of year thirteen as a big milestone like years ten or fifteen, it is in my eyes because it means I’ve been doing BFCG for nearly half my life now—which is crazy to think about! I’m so grateful to the Lord for allowing me to do this ministry for so long and while there’s always a lot of work to do, I truly love doing BFCG. ðŸ¥°
 
 


 
When planning this birthday celebration, I thought I would use the website Rafflecopter like I’ve done every single birthday before, but alas, they shut down last fall. So sad to see them go because it was such a helpful site for bloggers like myself! Because of this, I’m having to switch things up and there is a Google Form instead to be filled out to be entered to win one of four $25 USD Amazon gift card! 
 
(Opened internationally as long as Amazon delivers gift cards to your country! This form will close on April 23rd 12:00am CST and winners will be emailed within the next few days.)


 
 

 If the form above does not load properly, please click HERE to fill it out!
 
 
Once again, thank you so much for supporting BFCG and for being here! I truly appreciate you!
 
Have a Blessed week, my sweet friends!


Wednesday, April 8, 2026

"Escape on the Underground Railroad" by Nancy LeSourd

This review is for the content of the 2008 revised edition 

of this book that has this exact cover.


About this book:

  “Hannah’s world is shaken when she discovers her family’s involvement with the Underground Railroad. When runaways find their way to her Virginia home, she must decide if she will play it safe or join her family to help the slaves escape. In Philadelphia, her friend Sarah is drawn into the life of a seven-year-old orphaned slave, whose health and mental state has been shattered by the evils of slavery. As the danger increases, the girls must find the courage they need to act before it is too late.”


Series: Part of the “Liberty Letters” series, but does not seem to be connected to the other books in the series.


Spiritual Content- 2 Corinthians 3:17 in the author’s note; Scriptures are mentioned, quoted, & remembered; Prayers & Thanking Jesus; Talks about God, Him directing lives, & His plans; ’H’s are not capital when referring to God; Hannah & Sarah’s families are Quakers (they call others in their church “Friend” before the person’s name; It’s noted that they don’t sing or dance); Hannah feels like she’s in “the presence of angels” when in a room of notable men and women (who are against slavery); Mentions of God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, & callings from God; Mentions of prayers, praying, answered prayers, & Thanking God; Mentions of Bibles, Bible reading, those and places in the Bible, & memorizing Scriptures; Mentions of church, church going, services, worship, & preachers; A couple mentions of slaves being taught Bible Scriptures in a Sunday school class every Sabbath, but not to read (because it is illegal to teach a slave to read at that time in history); A couple mentions of Godspeed; A mention of a missionary; A mention of being blessed; 
             *Note: “Heavens!” is exclaimed once; Hannah writes that showing a runaway slave girl the alphabet made the girl shake like she wrote “the name of the devil himself”; Hannah calls a slave bounty hunter evil; A young male slave tells his mother that “Christian teaching was just a southern way to keep slaves in their place”; A young man tells Sarah to follow her heart and become a doctor if she wants to be.
 

Negative Content- A mention of curses (said, not written); A bit of eye rolling; Seeing injuries, blood/bleeding, pain, & stitches (including from a young child that was whipped; Sarah helps and watches a doctor treat bloody injuries and give stitches; all up to semi-detailed); Sarah is told about a child witnessing his parents being murdered (up to semi-detailed; pg. 88 in the physical book); Hannah wants her grandfather to stop helping with the Underground Railroad because it’s dangerous for him and her family & when he asks her to help, she doesn’t want to (*Spoilers* Her family help a runaway father and daughter which makes Hannah angry because they will be with them for many weeks and her grandfather could be arrested for helping them; After hearing their story, she still wants the runaway slaves to leave her home soon, but has more compassion and responsibilities for helping them; She still gets upset at the risks, calls the girl unthankful, and gets mad at the girl, but her mom encourages her to show compassion to the girl so Hannah tries to talk to the girl more and help her which leads to them becoming friends *End of Spoilers*); Set prior to the Civil War, this book frequently mentions and shows scenes of the underground railroad, helping escaping slaves to freedom, slaves/slavery (including slaves who were beaten), eluding slave catchers, & potential dangers for the slaves and those helping them (Two paintings in the bonus content at the end of the book show what slave auctions looked like in this historical time-period); Many mentions of slaves, slavery, runaway slaves, & slave catchers (including ones willing to kill slaves & bounties for slaves found dead or alive); Mentions of a slave child’s parents being shot and killed in front of him (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of deaths (including of a wife and baby), illnesses, & grief; Mentions of kidnappers kidnapping or tricking freed slaves to sell them again; Mentions of whippings/beatings, injuries, pain, blood/bleeding, & becoming unconscious due to the whippings (including slave children being whipped and having scars from being whipped, up to semi-detailed); Mentions of weapons & being held at gun-point; Mentions of slave masters threatening their slaves and breaking apart families (both as threats and as reality for some runaway slaves); Mentions of arrests & jails; Mentions of hatred; Mentions of hunting; Mentions of cow dung; A few mentions of fires & vandalism; A few mentions of lies & lying; A few mentions of butchering/slaughtering meat animals (for food, barely-above-not-detailed); A couple mentions of thieves; A couple mentions of gossip & rumors; A mention of deaths in a fire; A mention of human trafficking in today’s modern world; A mention of a drunk; A mention of alcohol; A mention of tobacco; 
             *Note: When undercover and helping with the Underground Railroad, Sarah has to color her face with silver nitrate to pass as a “Negro” (once; done with intentions to help and not racism); Sarah wants to be a doctor, but her father is not comfortable with the idea of a woman being a doctor (he “ramble[s] on” about a Quaker woman’s aspirations of a “husband, children, home, and service” and pretends he doesn’t hear her talk about her being able to serve by healing others; Sarah is concerned that her father is worried about her wanting to live in a man’s world and that she is not dedicated to becoming a proper Quaker woman; *Spoiler* At the end of the book, her parents give her their blessing for her to study to become a doctor *End of Spoiler*); A few mentions of prejudice free black women face in the North (regarding their hair and trying to make it look more like white women’s hair to be more accepted).
 
 
Sexual Content- A few blushes (due to a wink from a boy & due to family members asking Sarah & Hannah about boys and courting); Sarah thinks there is no time for courting and doesn’t think any boy would want to marry a doctor; Mentions of boys, courting, being sweet on someone, & Sarah being expected to marry in the near future; A mention of a married couple sharing a kiss.
 
-Sarah Smith
-Hannah Brown, age 16
                                P.O.V. switches between them via letters
                                            Set in 1858-1859
                                                        224 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

Just like the other book I read in this series last month, this was a hard read because of the history of the time-period. It’s awful to read about people were treated—mistreated—just because of their skin color. Unlike the prior book, however, I found myself much more interested in this plot with seeing those that our main characters were helping and the book felt like a much faster pace because of the dangers of helping runaway slaves. At first, I struggled with keeping these two main characters and their lives separated in my head, but eventually kept them straight. 

 

I’ve been impressed with this series so far and I’m definitely hoping to read the next two books in the series soon! With the two books I have read and reviewed, I think this could be a good addition for homeschool families adding this book to their curriculum about these historical time-periods. It’s a harder read and will depend on the girl’s sensitivity level, but it’s important history to know and I think the author has done great on showing what happened through the eyes of teens.

 

 

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.

Friday, April 3, 2026

"The Final Cut" by Roseanna White

About this book:

  “The spotlight is on Blackberry Valley when the popular TV show Destination Discovery comes to town. The host and crew are some of Hannah Prentiss’s friends from when she lived in Los Angeles, and they’re hot on the trail of a treasure supposedly hidden somewhere nearby. When the team hires Hannah to provide food and play local guide, she’s in a prime position to help them solve the century-old mystery of an outlaw who stole one of the largest gems ever discovered in the diamond mines of Arkansas and escaped with it to the wilds around Hannah’s beloved hometown.
    But as mishaps plague the investigators, both in the historic house they’re using as a base of operations and in the cave where the outlaw allegedly hid out, Hannah begins to suspect that someone in the present means to keep them from finding the answers of the past. Is it all just a publicity stunt—or is the legendary diamond real?”


Series: Book #11 in the “Mysteries of Blackberry Valley” series. Reviews of Book #1, Book #2, Book #3, Book #4, Book #5, Book #6, Book #7, Book #8, Book #9, and Book #10!


Spiritual Content- A few Scriptures are mentioned & remembered; Prayers, Thanking God, & Praising God; 'H’s are capital when referring to God; Mentions of God; Mentions of prayers, praying, & blessings over food; Mention of Bibles, Bible reading, & a Bible study; Mentions of churches, church going, & a preacher; A couple mentions of Easter Sunday & hymns; A mention of a mission trip; A mention of being blessed; 
             *Note: The TV show crew used to have a show about cryptids and ghosts, but Hannah tells someone that the TV show host would always approach it “very logically” and told her that “God is full of mysteries and who’s to say what wonders He made that we haven’t yet discovered or don’t understand?” (Hannah doesn’t think that something like the chupacabra is really out there, but shrugs and says she won’t “put God in a box”); One of the TV crew members thinks there is a ghost moving their stuff (due to a prior experience with a “spirit” knocking him over, but the others in the crew do not believe it’s a ghost at their lodgings or previously; However, one member says at the end that maybe the man did experience “something truly bizarre” previously); On the topic of ghosts, Hannah believes “God was certainly capable of the miraculous, but most things had reasonable explanations” and does not believe a ghost is haunting the place, but a human is messing with the crew’s items (the man calls them “those still moving among us” and mentions ghosts quite a few times; *Spoilers* It is revealed to be actual, alive humans messing with their items by the end *End of Spoilers*); Mentions of ghosts & haunted places; Mention of luck & being lucky; A few mentions of trilobites & prehistoric animals.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a form of ‘screw up’ and four ‘stupid’s; Some eye rolling; Hearing gunshots & a child scream (the child is physically unharmed, barely-above-not-detailed); Many mentions of a stolen diamond and other items, thieves, criminals, a mafia group, anarchists, & deaths/murders (*Spoilers* It’s believed that a criminal was shot and killed by US Marshalls, but he was actually an undercover US Marshall who was shot and killed by a criminal while protecting his nephew (which the nephew witnessed his uncle’s death), barely-above-not-detailed *End of Spoilers*); Mentions of someone being shot and killed; Mentions of deaths & grief (Hannah for her mother & Elinor for her husband); Mentions of lies, lying, & liars; Mentions of hunting; A few mentions of potential death or drowning when filming a TV show; A few mentions of jealousy; A couple mentions of newspaper stories about people being robbed or murdered by family members; A couple mentions of a missing person (Book #5); A couple mentions of car accidents; A couple mentions of threats; A couple mentions of a microphone being called a “dead cat”; A mention of the Nazis; A mention of almost being mugged; A mention of nightmares over witnessing a death; A mention of the Spanish Flu pandemic; A mention of a bully; 
             *Note: Mentions of car brands; A couple mentions of butting in/out of a conversation; A couple mentions of brand names (Perk coffee & Rolodex); A mention of a movie (Raiders of the Lost Ark).
 
 
Sexual Content- A hand kiss, two head kisses, three not-detailed kisses, and two barely-above-not-detailed kisses; Some touches, embraces, hand holding, warmth, & smelling (barely-above-not-detailed); Blushes; When a friend tells Hannah that she is waiting on having “sparks” with the right guy, Hannah tells her not to settle for less but also that it sometimes takes “more than one dinner for those sparks to ignite”; Mentions of boyfriends/girlfriends, dating, & dates; A few mentions of women throwing themselves at a TV show host & flirting with him; A few mentions of jealousy; A couple mentions of kisses & kissing; Some love, being in love, & the emotions (with hints to another potential romance in the historical time-period starting).
 
-Hannah Prentiss, age 36
               P.O.V. switches between Hannah & Elinor (in the historical period)
                                        Six scenes set in 1910
                                                        244 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

I wasn’t sure if this one would catch my attention, but because of accidentally reading the next book’s blurb, I knew I had to read it! I definitely enjoyed that ending and the behind the scenes of the TV show, but also was interested in the historical setting and the friend group in the contemporary main time-line too. The mystery was interesting albeit a bit rushed with a solution quickly shared at the conclusion. Like in the prior book, I did have to raise my eyebrows at Lacy once again doing some activities that seemed a bit questionable for her condition. I look forward to continuing the series soon to see what happens with Hannah next. :)

 

 

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.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

"Reins of Love" by Laurie Salisbury

About this book:

  “Nine-year-old twins Beth and Ben Chamberlain are moving to a home in the country. Beth's dream of owning a horse could finally be coming true. For Beth, moving is everything she has ever wanted. Ben might be a twin, but his feelings about the move couldn't be more mixed. Sure, there's a big yard and a barn, with all kinds of exciting possibilities. But, what if all of Beth's dreams come true, and the only thing he gets is the short end of the stick? Bad moods turn into bad attitudes and threaten to ruin both of their dreams. The siblings must learn to let God take control of the reins of their hearts before everything is lost.”


Series: Book #1 in the “He Reigns” series.


Spiritual Content- Each chapter starts with a Scripture that is also usually discussed in the chapter as well; In a bonus chapter at the end of the book, the author shares about Jesus and a prayer to pray to welcome Him into your heart; Prayers; Overhearing someone being witnessed to and praying to be saved; Many talks about God, Jesus, Scriptures, putting Scriptures into action, obeying God, witnessing God’s love to others, & trusting God; ‘H’s are not capital when referring to God; Beth prays for God to forgive her and help her forgive someone; Beth and Ben agree that because they belong to Jesus, they should live every day like Jesus wants them to live and pray to have someone to minister to (which they both meet other kids soon after praying this and invite them to church); The twins’ father refers to their new town as “God’s country”; Mentions of God, praising and thanking Him, Jesus, & the Holy Spirit; Mentions of prayers, praying, & answered prayers; Mentions of churches, church going, & inviting others; Mentions of sin & repenting; A few mentions of Bibles & Bible reading. 
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: A ‘stupid’; Ben is upset and in a bad mood about moving due to feeling like Beth is getting more than him and it isn’t fair (particularly regarding her getting a bigger room and their parents considering getting her a horse; Beth accuses him of being jealous and he yells at her; After this, Ben tells his parents that it isn’t fair and the parents discuss both of these problems with him, which makes Ben realize he is being selfish but still feels hurt; Ben apologizes for his bad mood in the next chapter to his dad); Beth doesn’t like her horseback riding teacher because she scares her and never smiles, but her mom tells her to show God’s love to the teacher; Beth tries to be nicer to the teacher, but is upset when the teacher blames her for something and says she shouldn’t have a horse if Beth won’t be responsible (due to Beth overfeeding her horse and getting colic; After a conversation with her parents, Beth tries again to be kind to the teacher; Beth apologizes for not being kind to her and the teacher also apologizes to her for not being very nice); Mentions of a horse having colic due to overfeeding; A few mentions of abused and neglected horses (no details); 
             *Note: Beth & Ben come up with a plan to surprise someone and they keep it a secret from their parents (leaving their uncle to convince their parents it’s a good idea); A couple mentions of a brand name (Jell-O); A mention of a song (‘Believe’ by Brooks and Dunn).
 
 
Sexual Content- N/A.
 
-Beth Chamberlain, age 9
-Ben Chamberlain, age 9
                                P.O.V. switches between them 
                                                        131 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating-

It was really nice to see active parents in the middle-grade main characters’ lives and talking to them about God and Scriptures! The parents were encouraging, but also firm with the twins which felt like a healthy and realistic family. 

 

I did find the plot to be simple and a bit random at times, but that’s probably because I am (much) older than the targeted age range! Those around ages 8-12 who especially love horses would probably enjoy this story much more than me.

 

 

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.