Monday, July 6, 2026

"A Lady's Handbook to Gadgets and Guile" by Angela Bell

About this book:

  “Ambulatory wheelchair user Margaret Kingsley secretly crafts gadgets for the Daughters of Genius Society, a covert team of lady inspectors disguised as harmless bluestocking spinsters. While her fellow inspectors gallivant about London solving crimes, Margaret has been perfectly content assisting from the sidelines--until her expertise is needed to infiltrate the domain of London's most prolific inventor, Alvan T. Harrison.
    Charles Noble sacrificed his career as a musician to support his family after his father's stroke. Now he balances ledgers as a secretary by day and tends his disabled father by night, until taking a temporary job as event coordinator for a famous inventor commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of his mechanical empire. As strange occurrences surface, Charles's event planning collides with Margaret's case, and the pair must unravel a plot of sabotage against the inventor's legacy while also investigating the sparks of attraction between them.”


Series: A spin-off/sequel to “A Lady’s Guide to Marvels and Misadventure”; Also considered to be Book #1 in its own series, “Daughters of Genius Society”


Spiritual Content- A few Scriptures are mentioned & thought over; Prayers & Thanking God; Praising God through hymns and worship; Talks about God, Him being our Sustainer, & giving Him our pain; ‘H’s are capital when referring to God; Mentions of God, His creation, & Him sustaining us; Mentions of prayers, praying, & thanking God; Mentions of hymns & worshiping God; A couple mentions of a meeting being an “occurrence of providential orchestration”; A mention of the rapture; 
             *Note: Mentions of Cupid’s arrow making someone smitten; A mention of being lucky.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘balderdash’, a ‘by jove’, a ‘drat’, a ‘dumb’, a ‘gah’, a ‘pah’, a ‘shoot’, a ‘stars above’, a ‘what in blazes’, two ‘botheration’s, two forms of ‘dashed/dash it all’, two ‘idiot’s, two ’shut up’s, and nine ‘stupid’s; A mention of a curse (said, not written); Margaret exclaims “rusted cogs” (x4) and “great gadgets” (x17); Charles often exclaims composers’ names in place of typical phrases (such as “Bach and Beethoven”, “Hummel help me”, “Great Gustav Mahler”, and “what in the Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart”); Side characters say exclamations based off of their interests (such as a woman who likes plants saying “oh my morels” and “cremini”; Margaret also says ‘what in the ever-loving kitty cats’); Charles and his brother call each other names when bantering (teasing, not mean-spirited); When undercover, Margaret does lie or withhold the truth a few times; Eye rolling; Being attacked, Fighting, Injuries, & Pain (including pain due to chronic pain and old injuries; up to semi-detailed); Mentions of deaths & grief; Mentions of wars, battles, deaths, & grief for fallen friends (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of a father having a stroke & his injuries (including being paralyzed on one side and losing the ability to speak; Charles’ father); Mentions of an accident, serve injuries, pain, & blood/bleeding; Mentions of a woman being committed to an asylum by her husband & others planning to rescue her; Mentions of kidnappings/abductions & hostages; Mentions of thefts, thieves, stealing, & stolen items; Mentions of threats & blackmail; Mentions of gossip & rumors; Mentions of injured animals; A few mentions of arrests & prison; A few mentions of embezzlement; A few mentions of eavesdropping; A couple mentions of lies & lying; A couple mentions of alcohol & drinking; A mention of a drunk pirate; A mention of cigars; A mention of throwing up; 
             *Note: A panic attack and unable to breath or focus (Charles, up to semi-detailed); Due to an accident in her childhood, Margaret is afflicted with chronic pain and feels like a burden on her parents (often thinking of herself as a burden, useless, and deals with guilt over it all, but tries not to allow her thoughts to wallow in bitterness); *Spoiler* Margaret mentions this feeling to Charles and he tells her to talk to her parents about these feelings as they probably do not feel the same way that she does and are grateful she is alive; She talks to her parents a bit later about this and feeling like she is a burden, but they firmly tell her that she is not a burden and is their most precious treasure *End of Spoilers*; Margaret dislikes being called or treated as an “invalid” or a “cripple”; Margaret recalls hurtful words from a childhood friend’s mother about her injury and hasn’t allowed any of her new friends to find out the extent of her pain since then (as she is concerned that they would find her eventually leave her as well if they knew); Margaret overhears two young boys talking about her and her disability like she can’t hear them, which hurts her; Mentions of musicians/composers (Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Debussy, Franz Listz, Gilbert and Sullivan, Gustav Mahler, Handel, Haydn, Hector Berlioz, Herman Bemberg, Hummel, Humperdinck, Johann Pachelbel, Joseph Bologne, Mendelssohn, Mozart, Paganini, Richard Wagner, Scarlatti, Schubert, Spafford, Strauss, Tchaikovsky, Verdi, Vivaldi, & Wette); Mentions of and references to different authors & fictional characters (Jane Austen, Pepper Basham, Toni Shiloh, Wilkie Collins, Jaime Jo Wright, Edgar Allen Poe, Jules Verne, Sharon Hinck, & Charles Dickens, Mark Twain, Elizabeth Gaskell, & Louisa May Alcott); A few mentions of ballets (Swan Lake); A few mentions of panic attacks; A couple mentions of miscarriages and a couple suffering losses; A mention of an artist (Henriëtte Ronner-Knip); A mention of some men believing that the female mind is “incapable” of inventing something.
 
 
Sexual Content- A fingers-to-lips touch, a hand/fingers kiss, a forehead kiss, and two barely-above-not-detailed kisses; Staring at lips (barely-above-not-detailed); Touches, Hand holding, Flutters, Nearness, & Smelling (border-line barely-above-not-detailed // semi-detailed); Blushes, Flirting, & Winks; Noticing & Staring (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of blushes & winks; A few mentions of chaperones; A couple mentions of a married couple kissing; A mention of flirting; Love, falling in love, & the emotions;
             *Note: Margaret thinks of herself as a “damaged good” that no man would care to buy (because of her injury); A few mentions of a woman possibly not being able to have biological children due to an injury (*Spoiler* Margaret *End of Spoiler*); A mention of buxom woman.
 
-Margaret Kingsley, age 30
-Charles Noble, age 30
                                P.O.V. switches between them 
                                         Set in 1895-1896
                                                        336 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

After reading “A Lady’s Guide to Marvels and Misadventure” twice and greatly enjoying it both times, I’ve been eagerly awaiting the next book by Angela Bell. The blurb and cover for this book had me so curious and so excited about meeting Margaret. Which was multiplied by about a hundred when I started reading and found out that Margaret is the daughter of Clara and Theodore from this first book! This may have been obvious to some astute readers if you notice her last name, I was taken by surprise and so happy about it! It was so wonderful to see those two again as they are one of my favorite couples of all-time and it was so special to meet their daughter. 

 

In fact, there were some Easter Eggs from not only that book but other clever hints (my favorite was “The Aristocats” nod!) that made me tickled pink while reading and smile at finding them!

 

Margaret was a lovely girl who I wish I could give a big (but gentle) hug to; due to her chronic pain, she faces challenges that many wouldn’t think twice about completing. Washing her face, getting dress, and daily tasks can be too much and require assistance from family members. I do not have personal experience in chronic pain, but I have dear family and friends who do, and this book helped me understand a little bit more of some of the things they have to handle on a daily basis. Despite all of this, Margaret is a dear. Her faith was the best—okay, if I’m being fully honest, second best part of this book because I adored seeing Clara and Theodore the most—part of this book because of how she still worships the Lord through her pain and weakness. She could have easily continued to be mad at God for the accident that stole her mobility and health, but she praises Him through it and I just loved that major element to this book. So, maybe seeing my favorite couples again and the faith content are tied overall for my favorite thing about this book. 😉

 

Margaret’s group of friends reminded me of some friend groups from Jen Turano’s books—particularly “The Bleecker Street Inquiry Agency” series. I did have to make use of the search feature a few times to keep them all straight, which helped a lot in that regard. 

 

Our Male Main Character, Charles, was also a dear. He turned away from his promising music career to take care of his family after his father’s stroke. I personally related to his story a little more after taking care of my mother and loved seeing the parts of him with his family. I understood his anxiety and introvert nature so well and thought him and Margaret were wonderful for each other. He was completely like a smitten schoolboy over Margaret. This is absolutely not a complaint because I love it when the Male Main Character is smitten with his girl. That will always be a favorite trope of mine, especially with the two of them being friends first before being anything more. He instantly fell for her, but it felt so sweet and precious. One thing I would have liked to see more of would have been more faith content and conversations in his parts, but overall, I great appreciated that both main characters had strong faiths in Jesus Christ. That’s not always super common in Christian Fiction books and stands out to me when I read a book with both main characters/both halves of the couple having a faith—Margaret and Charles were great in this regard. 

 

“A Lady’s Handbook to Gadgets and Guile” felt a little more like a fantastical historical book than I would say “A Lady’s Guide to Marvels and Misadventure” did was due to all of Margaret’s inventions. While that one had a flying machine that looked like a giant owl, this book had more steam-powered and unique products. It’s not purely historical because of these clever ideas and items, so go into this story expecting some interesting inventions. 

 

The verdict? Precious. Heartwarming. I want a group hug with all of these characters. While I don’t think any spin-off book can top the original book, this was a lovely companion story with lovable characters. I look forward to seeing what will happen next in this series! I also plan to listen to the audiobook version of this sequel with my mom as she greatly enjoyed “A Lady’s Guide to Marvels and Misadventure” when we listened to it together last year. I look forward to revisiting this book and all the characters soon!

 

 

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.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

"Forever Settled in My Heart" by Laurie Salisbury

About this book:

  “Summer is supposed to be fun, but things have never been worse for eight-year-old Jack Bolton and his nine-year-old sister, Emma. Spending the summer with grandparents he has never met is not Jack's idea of fun. And Grandpa bringing horses to the farm has Emma sick with fear. The siblings remember Dad saying, “We can trust God to bring us through anything,” but they are finding it hard to believe God's promises with Mom and Dad so far away. His promises must be Forever Settled in their hearts.”


Series: Book #2 in the “He Reigns” series. Review of Book #1 Here!


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; A few Scriptures are quoted, mentioned, prayed, discussed, & thought over; Prayers & asking God about what a Scripture means; Praising & Thanking God; Witnessing to someone & hearing that person invite God into her heart; Talks about God, trusting Him, praying, & fear; Most ‘H’s are not capital when referring to God; Jack starts to read his Bible in the morning, but then begins to rush through it or skip it because of excitement about something else which *Spoilers* causes his attitude to become troublesome and his grandmother talks to him about it; Jack feels the Holy Spirit speaking to his heart about reading the Bible *End of Spoilers*; Jack learned that it was okay to just read the Bible a little at a time and listen for God to explain it & also that it was okay to talk to God like he talks to a friend; Mentions of God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, God keeping His promises, & trusting Him; Mentions of Bibles & Bible reading; Mentions of prayers, praying, & answered prayers; A few mentions of a church, church going, & services; A mention of miracles. 
 

Negative Content- A bit of eye rolling; Jack thinks of his sister as “bossy” once and snaps at her; When very disappointed, Jack says he hates being with his grandparents and then has an important realization about the meaning of a Scripture which fixes his attitude; Emma hates being on the farm due to her fear of large animals and getting hurt by them which makes her sob over being there (*Spoiler* Her grandmother talks to her about this and she is not fearful by the end of the book *End of Spoiler*); Emma and Jack are told by their grandmother that they must obey them right away without complaining and while they both say they will, Emma wonders if Jack can do that; *Spoiler* Shortly after, Jack doesn’t follow the rule of staying close to the house, so he and Emma are punished with an extra chore; Jack realizes after praying about it that he was wrong and apologizes to his grandparents *End of Spoilers*; Halfway through, Jack starts to get a bad attitude about helping around the farm and *Spoiler* it is due to him skipping his Bible reading and prioritizing something above God; His grandmother talks to him about this and he tries to do better *End of Spoiler*; Jack is concerned that he might get a “beating with a leather strap” from his grandfather if he misbehaved (this is a misunderstanding and does not happen); Mentions of a car accident, injuries, & a grandmother being in the hospital (but will be okay); A couple mentions of a fire; A couple mentions of jealousy (including Jack towards a girl who lives on a farm & Emma wishing she had a girl’s curly hair).
 
 
Sexual Content- N/A.
 
-Emma Warren, age 9
-Jackson “Jack” Warren, age 8
                                P.O.V. switches between them 
                                                        155 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

I was a little surprised that this book didn’t follow the twins from the first book of the series. It follows two new characters, Jack and Emma, as they visit their grandparents who they haven’t seen much. It looks like most of the rest of the book in the series will follow this new sibling duo. 

 

While there were a few typos here and there, it overall a good story with strong faith content and our main characters learning good lessons. I think a few conversations might be a little unrealistic for the ages of our main characters, but perhaps it will cause young readers to think about what they are saying and grow from the characters' experiences 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.

Friday, June 26, 2026

"A Pet Project" by Stephanie Coleman

About this book:

  “When a young woman knocks on the door asking for Harriet Bailey-Knight's late uncle, Harriet and her aunt Jinny are pulled into an unexpected mystery. Uncle Dom's friend, Joshua, had started a boutique pet food company with a partner years before. However, five years into their new enterprise, Joshua's partner accused him of embezzling money. Desperate for help, Joshua reached out to Dom, but tragedy struck—Joshua died before he could clear his name. Now Joshua's daughter, Anna Grace, desperately wants to discover the truth of what happened when she was a child. Harriet determines to help Anna Grace find the answers she seeks.
    Meanwhile, Harriet gets a surprise request to step up as the lead vet for the annual puffin festival in Yorkshire. She's thrilled about the request, but not everyone is. Zoe, the assistant wildlife vet, claims Harriet isn't qualified. When an injured puffin is found, can Harriet and Zoe set aside their differences to help the animal?”


Series: Book #21 in the “Mysteries of Cobble Hill Farm” series. Click on the numbers to be taken to the prior books’ reviews: Book #1, Book #2, Book #3, Book #4, Book #5, Book #6, Book #7, Book #8, Book #9, Book #10, Book #11, Book #12, Book #13, Book #14, Book #15, Book #16, Book #17, Book #18, Book #19, and Book #20!


Spiritual Content- Colossians 3:13 at the beginning; Prayers; Church going; Mentions of God, His creation, & showing grace to others; Mentions of prayers, praying, thanking God, & blessings over food; Mentions of churches, church going, pastors, sermons, services, & hymns; A few mentions of blessings & being blessed; A couple mentions of books of & those in the Bible; A mention of Bible reading; A mention of a godly man; A mention of a parent being concerned about his adult child who walked away from the faith; 
             *Note: Mentions of luck & being lucky; A mention of a “heavenly bite” of food.
 

Negative Content- Mentions of deaths & grief (including a woman for her husband, a young woman for her father, & a woman for her dog); Mentions of embezzlement, accusations of stealing/fraud, crimes, & thieves; Mentions of lies, lying, & liars; Mentions of gossip & rumors; Mentions of pubs; Mentions of deaths of animals (dogs) and grief, injured or sick animals, & Harriet’s veterinary clinic treatments (including animals in pain, having tumors/lumps, fleas, surgeries, and vaccinations being mentioned; barely-above-not-detailed); A few mentions of manipulation; A mention of a restaurant burning down (Book #19); A mention of a divorce/separation; A mention of a child eavesdropping on her parents; A mention of a dog being hit by a car (but will be okay); 
             *Note: Mentions of car brands; A few mentions of books (Narnia).
 
 
Sexual Content- a forehead kiss, six not-detailed kisses, and three barely-above-not-detailed kisses; Some touches, embraces, & hand holding (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of married couples having dates; A few mentions of girlfriends/boyfriends, dating, & break-ups; A mention of a crush; 
             *Note: As a note for parents of younger readers interested in this series, there are a couple references to Harriet and her husband sharing a bed at night, but there is nothing sexual hinted at in those scenes.
 
-Harriet Bailey-Knight
                                P.O.V. of Harriet 
                                                        256 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

This was a great book in this series! It was well balanced between the animal parts with the puffins (loved hearing and learning about those especially) and then the mystery with the pet food company. I’ll admit that some parts showing a pet owner grieving her dog were hard for me to read as I relate to it, but other than those sad moments, I did really enjoy the book. The pacing was good and the light romance between Harriet and her husband was very sweet as well. It will be sad to say goodbye to this series next month when I review the final book in the series!

 

 

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, June 24, 2026

"High Heels and Hay Bales" by Keira Mueller

About this book:

  “Three city girls. Two country girls. One absurdly amazing summer.
    Priscilla, Bella, and Lacy Prichardson, daughters of the richest man on Earth, cannot wait for their exclusive summer vacation—hopefully in the Bahamas. Or Paris. Or Santorini. Not a random farm in the middle of nowhere.
    Country girls Skylar and Cassidy have no time for fuss and feathers while helping their grandmother run the family farm, especially not for three walking fashion magazines who think that milk comes from a tree and horses are magical.
    Forced to partner with peasants, the Prichardsons take to farm work as well as pigs fly (not at all), spurring hilarious hijinks involving bucking broncos, tractor driving, and horseback riding.
    Deprived of all luxury life essentials, will the triplets embrace their new reality (face-first where Lacy’s concerned), or hug their high heels closer?”


Series: Book #1 in the “Country Girls vs. City Girls” duology.


Spiritual Content- Going to a church for a funeral; Mentions of praying (but not towards Who); A couple mentions of churches & church going; A couple mentions of a preacher & sermon at a funeral; A couple mentions of hymns sung at a funeral; A mention of God; A mention of the Bible; A mention of the Fruit of the Spirit; A mention of being blessed; 
             *Note: A grandmother exclaims “Heavens to Betsy!” and different variations of it a handful of times; ‘where in heaven’s name’ is also exclaimed once; One of the triplets rejoices with yelling “Hallelujah” about being able to tan; A tombstone says that a deceased person was “stolen from our earthly sphere by some mysterious power”; Bella says that she hopes the “fates” never bless someone with a sale; A few mentions of the girls imitating theirs idol (an older sister or artist); A few mentions of a store called “Bikini Heaven”; A few mentions of Zodiac signs; A few mentions of statues of Cupid; A couple mentions of eyes having devilish gleams & faces having evil glows (when pranking someone else); A couple mentions of girls looking like goddesses; A mention of Bella thinking Heaven has “angels, clouds, and unlimited shopping malls”; A mention of the triplets being used to people worshiping the ground they walk on; A mention of a “heavenly” cheese; A mention of an evil witch and spells in a book; A mention of having a sixth sense.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘bah’, a ‘gosh’, a ‘holy hay bales’, a ‘holy moly’, a ‘shucks’, a ‘suck it up’, two ‘holy cow’s, three forms of ‘dumb’, four ‘jeez/geez’s, four forms of ‘idiot’, four forms of ‘suck’, five ‘stupid’s, eight ‘OMG’s, eight forms of ‘oh my gosh’, eight ‘shut up’s, and nine ‘duh’s; Many other phrases (such as ‘what in the green grasslands’, ‘miniskirts and Michelin stars’, ‘jam preserve us’, ‘for the love of all things good and Gucci’, ‘freaky foundation’, ‘flapjacks!’, ‘thank Gucci’, ‘oh my gummy bears’, and many other varieties) are said and exclaimed; Other name calling such as ‘brats’, ‘moronic’, ‘dum-dum’, ‘dolt’, ‘donut-brain’, ‘ding-dong’, and ‘imbecile’ are also said; Lots of eye rolling & sarcasm; Fighting, Being punched, Injuries, & blood/Bleeding (up to semi-detailed); Seeing a death (of a parent due to an accident, barely-above-not-detailed); One of the twins punches one of the triplets due to the girl’s mean words about her grandmother and all the sisters get involved in the fight (up to semi-detailed); The triplets often partake in sister bickering and snapping at each other, name calling, throwing items at each other, & grabbing items from one another; The twins play a prank on the triplets (that ends up dying the triplets’ hair) so the triplets play a prank back on them (*Spoilers* which involves letting all the animals at the farm loose; All the animals are recovered; After a physical fight, both sister groups apologize to each other under orders from the twins’ grandmother *End of Spoilers*); One of the triplets kicks a chick, which hurts it and Skylar tells her to never hit an animal; Mentions of deaths from accidents & grief (from a husband for his late wife); Mentions of injuries, pain, passing out, & blood/bleeding (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of threats & blackmail (between the sisters/all five girls); Mentions of gossip & rumors; Mentions of throwing up & vomit; Mentions of manure; A few mentions of hatred; A couple mentions of stealing; A couple mentions of lies, lying, & liars; A couple mentions of jealousy; A couple mentions of animals (dogs and horses) that have passed away; 
             *Note: Lacy has moments of panic attacks & hyperventilating at distressing news (but can snap out of it when yelled at) while her sisters pass out; The triplets refer to their mother by her first name; The triplets wear lots of makeup and place major importance on it & being on their phones and social media sites (Priscilla notes once that she would “rather die” than go without makeup; *Spoilers* Towards the end, the triplets start wearing less makeup when working on the farm *End of Spoilers*); Many, many mentions of designer brands and the triplets spending a lot of money on designer items (Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Jimmy Choo, Harry Winston, Dior, Valentino, Versace, Cartier, Chanel, Prada, Tim Ford, YSL, Michael Kors, Charlotte Tilbury, Marc Jacobs, Montblanc, Aquazzura, Armani, Fendi, Oscar de la Renta, Lululemon, Swarovski, Rolex, Dolce & Gabbana, Neutrogena, Bulgari, Burberry, Hermès, Calvin Klein, Saint Laurent, & Alexander McQueen); Many mentions of makeup, applying makeup, and large collections of makeup (including eight-year-olds wearing makeup); Mentions of books, authors, & fictional characters and places (which references to Harry Potter, Jane Austen’s books, Frankenstein, Shakespeare, ‘In Search of Lost Time’ by Marcel Proust, ‘Looking for Alaska’by John Green, Anne of Green Gables, Dr. Seuss, & Sherlock Holmes); Mentions of social media sites & apps (Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, Netflix, & Pinterest); Mentions of brand names (Barbie, Dum-Dums, Dyson, Stanley Cups, Webster dictionaries, Mad Libs, LEGO Friends, & Boeing); Mentions of artists (Vermeer, Van Gogh, Monet, & Edgar Degas); Mentions of panic attacks, hyperventilating, & passing out; A few mentions of magazines (Vogue, Vanity Fair, & Harper’s Bazaar); A couple mentions of Starbucks; A mention of the Met Gala; A mention of some people saying humans are animals.
 
 
Sexual Content- The triplets comment about cute boys, wanting a new boyfriend, and some of them having two hundred boyfriends total or twenty boyfriends at once; One of the twins asks her sister if “looking pretty [like the triplets] is the way to attract attention and success” because the triplets have all had many boyfriends, but her sister says it doesn’t matter what you wear but how you present yourself (Cassidy still wonders about this and would love to catch someone’s eye just once, so she asks the triplets for help; Bella says that almost anyone can be pretty with enough makeup and a cute outfit, which confuses Cassidy as she’s been taught that beauty come from within, but decides to trust the triplet’s opinion because they are some of the most gorgeous people she knows; Bella tells Cassidy again that true beauty comes from what you wear); Bella comments that “romance is a pursuit for those not striving for higher ideals and a plague upon our society” but says she doesn’t really believe that when asked; Two ‘hot’s when referring to boys; Mentions of cute/hot boys, boyfriends/girlfriends, dates, dating, break-ups, & attraction; Mentions of boys staring at the triplets and trying to flirt with them; Mentions of blushes; A mention of one of the girls being “starved of proper male company” and reading romance novels; A mention of YA book being very “amorous”;
             *Note: The triplets dress in “skimpy” tops and “inappropriately short shorts” and are told to put on something less revealing (so they pull on skin-tight cropped t-shirts instead, but the twins’ grandmother decides not to comment on those and pick her battles instead); One of the triplets wears a “minuscule miniskirt” and top that was close to exposing an “unmentionable area”; A few other scenes of the triplets wearing skimpy and short clothing, outfits that hug their shapes/curves, & bikinis (One triplet plans to wear a skimpy bikini, but a sister tells her that it’s “not even legal” to wear in public); Cassidy tries on a dress of the triplet’s that the girls say will “flaunt [her] assets” due to the V-neck and show off her legs, but Cassidy is uncomfortable in it (though she still wears the dress to the event and attracts both attention from the boys and disapproving stares from some conservative adults; She has to watch her neckline from slipping any lower; *Spoiler* Skylar brought more casual dresses for her sister and the triplets to change into just in case, so then the others change during the event and are more comfortable *End of Spoilers*); The triplets comment often about calories, counting calories, different diets, avoiding sugar due to possible weight gain, and maintaining their weight/figures while also avoiding carbs and eating very little to keep their “size negative two”; The triplets avoid working out to keep from gaining muscle mass; One of the triplets comments “A moment on the lips, a lifetime on the hips!” when offered a carb-heavy meal; *Spoilers* As the book continues (past half-way through) and they start to work hard on the farm, they start to eat more food (including carbs) and start to gain muscles; When visited by their rich friends, the triplets are told about those girls eating five hundred calories or less, their “cheat” days on their diets (by adding an extra almond to a meal), and only eating a single blueberry when feeling faint; One of the girls tells Cassidy she looks like she needs to be on a diet, which Cassidy is shocked by and says she’s a size six; After these girls leave, Priscilla apologizes to the twins for how she acted when she first arrived on the farm and all five girls apologize for something and ask for forgiveness *End of Spoilers*; Mentions of the triplets packing and wearing skimpy outfits; Mentions of bikinis; Mentions of acne/pimples & wrinkles (and the triplets being concerned about both and avoiding them); A few mentions of girls (including the triplets) having hallucinations due to a lack of food for days; A mention of one of the triplets practicing “lucratively suggestive poses” in the mirror; A mention of B.O.
 
-Priscilla Prichardson, age 14
-Bella Prichardson, age 14
-Lacy Prichardson, age 14
-Skylar Spencer
-Cassidy Spencer
                                P.O.V. switches between them 
                                                        381 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

When I first heard of this book, it was the cover that attracted me to the story—I mean, look how cute the cover is! It’s adorable and fits the book very well. I was a little nervous about having five main characters and while it took me about fifty pages to get the triplets’ names right and their personalities, I was able to keep them all straight by the end. I do want to note that I was a little taken aback by a death of a parent that happened in a rather silly manner and the girls being unaffected by it in the first chapter of the book. 

 

I think there were some pros and cons for me, personally, about this book, but I do think other readers would enjoy it more. 

 

Positive- It was well written with a lot of descriptive vocabulary used, which was great! 

 

Con (for me)- I found the triplets to be really over-the-top to the point of being like a Disney Channel character—think like London Tipton on steroids…but three of her. They have eighty closets, eat with actual gold spoons, and easily spend a million dollars on a shopping spree. There were a ton of designer name name-dropping throughout the almost 400-pages which got to be a bit much for my tastes.

 

Both- I didn’t love the triplets in general, but I did grow to like the youngest, Lacy, as she started to become more open to farm life. Priscilla was really mean to her sisters at times and I found myself frustrated by her and her comments. Thankfully, there’s some decent character development and lessons learned, so I was glad to see the changes in both the triplets and the twins towards each other and the other sister group’s interests. I wish it had come sooner because some of the triplet’s spoiled attitudes and crazy spending had me flabbergasted and it took me about halfway through the book to get into the story.

 

I was expecting at least a bit more faith content in this book, so I was disappointed by the lack of it in this story. Hopefully book two in the duology will have more of it and also the triplets becoming a little more down-to-earth with the changes that will be happening in their lives. **Edit to add: After posting this review, it's come to my attention that this book is marketed and was published as Clean Fiction, so that's why there wasn't much faith content. My apologizes for the misunderstanding and I want to give a note correcting this. 

 

I think I probably would have enjoyed this book a bit more when I was younger, perhaps around ages 12/13. Our main characters were a little too dramatic for my reading tastes now, but some readers may be okay with that. Some families may not care for all the brand name-dropping or the comments about diets and counting carbs even though it’s played up and boarder-lines on ridiculous and impossible as times, so I think this book may only work for those who can understand the over-the-top elements to this story and be entertained by it.

 

 

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.