Friday, March 31, 2023

"The Bark of Zorro" by Kathleen Y'Barbo

About this book:

  “Who Is Spray Painting the Dogs in Brenham, Texas?
    Cozy up with your favorite pooch and unwind with a small-town mystery in book 4 of the Gone to the Dogs series.
    Strange happenings are afoot in Brenham, Texas, as dogs start showing up at the Lone Star Veterinary Clinic with a Z spray painted on them. The cops blame pranksters, while pet owners are blaming each other. Receptionist Cassidy Carter uses her social media expertise to try to get the culprit caught on camera, but Texas game warden, Justin Cameron, thinks online media attention is the last thing this case needs. When Cassidy’s post goes viral, more dogs are found painted and the clinic gets marked with a big Z too. How could her good intentions have backfired so badly?”


Series: Book #4 in the “Gone to the Dogs Mystery” series. Can be read as stand-alones, but would be most enjoyed if read in order. Reviews of Book #1 Here!, Book #2 Here!, and Book #3 Here!


Spiritual Content- A Scripture is quoted & read; Prayers & Thanking God; Mentions of God & having a faith; Mentions of prayers, praying, & thanking God; Mentions of churches, church going, & a pastor; A mention of a blessing; 
             *Note: A couple mentions of aliens.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘blasted’, a ‘care one flip [for something]’, a form of ‘darn’, a ‘oh my gosh’, two ‘dumb’s, two ‘ticked off’s, four ‘idiot’s, and seven ‘stupid’s; Some sarcasm & eye rolling; Being threatened; Mentions of crimes, criminals, crime scenes, breaking the law, & arrests; Mentions of jails/prisons & jailtime; Mentions of a man almost getting hit by a car; Mentions of a funeral home & bodies; Mentions of graffiti/vandalism; Mentions of pranks; Mentions of an accident involved a dog & a dog going missing (all dogs are okay); A couple mentions of a drowning; A couple mentions of the possibility of a crook or murderer (Cassidy’s imagination); A couple mentions of being threatened; A couple mentions of hunting; A mention of someone possibly being killed by a taser; A mention of someone not appearing to be a serial killer; A mention of a possible hostage situation; A mention of lies; A mention of bullies (& them rhyming “Cass” with other insulting words); A mention of someone winning the lottery; 
             *Note: Mentions of TV shows, movies, actors, & fictional characters (Downtown Abbey, Scooby-Doo, Zorro, & Douglas Fairbanks); Mentions of social media sites & technology (Instagram, TikTok, Zoom, FaceTime, & AirTags); Mentions of singers & songs (Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, Elvis, & Miranda Lambert); A few mentions of Boy Scouts & Girl Scouts; A couple mentions of two women arguing and one blaming the Democrats for dogs getting painted and the other blaming the Republicans (they conceded it could have been the Independents and then say it could be anymore painting the dogs);A couple mentions of fast food places (McDonald’s & Chick-fil-A); A couple mentions of newspapers.
 
 
Sexual Content- Two cheek kisses, a not-detailed kiss, five barely-above-not-detailed kiss, and a border-line barely-above-not-detailed // semi-detailed kiss; Embraces, Hand holding, & Nearness (barely-above-not-detailed); Noticing & Smelling (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of kisses & kissing; Mentions of dates, dating, boyfriends/girlfriends, break-ups, & exes; Mentions of crushes; Mentions of a cute/handsome/gorgeous/hunky guy; A mention of a wink; Love, falling in love, & the emotions.
 
-Cassidy Carter 
                                1st person P.O.V. of Cassidy 
                                                        258 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

Here’s a new trope for everyone: “He’s no nonsense, She’s full-of-nonsense (in the best way)”, or I guess we could call it the Grumpy/Sunshine trope, but I feel like my new trope fits better. That said, I wasn’t sure how this couple would work out with his over-the-top protectiveness, but I really appreciate that they had to have an actual conversation about that. It was nice to see quick communication. 

This really was a fun book, though! This whole series has been so much fun and I loved finally getting to know the sunshine of the Lone Star Vet Clinic, Cassidy, better. While the mystery elements weren’t my top favorite of the series, it still kept me engaged and wondering who had done it. My only one nitpick would be that I do wish there was more faith content as this book was on the lighter side in that regard, but overall it was a really enjoyable and clean read!

 

 

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 Publisher (Barbour) for this honest review.


Monday, March 27, 2023

"Leapin' Leopards" by Bill Myers

About this book:

  “A massive mess, a leopard on the loose, and the arrival of new life--it's just another day in the life of the Mulligans. From bestselling author Bill Myers comes a hilarious, warmhearted, and action-packed adventure starring the Mulligan family.
   Neither Michael nor Traci Mulligan had intended upon a large family, let alone one of such diversity. But God had other plans. After their second child, Lisa, was born blind, they began to see their gift for reaching out, connecting, and laughing with special children with special needs--all while raising their family among the many creatures living at the animal park that they operate.
   Are there trials? You bet. There's no way to keep the boat from rocking with so many children from such diverse backgrounds and in such an incredible environment. But their faith in Christ, commitment to one another, and ability to laugh at themselves keep them digging in to make it work.”


Series: Book #1 in “The Magnificent Mulligans” series.


Spiritual Content- Ephesians 4:32 at the beginning; Scriptures are quoted, read, & discussed (including about a dozen in the Thoughts & Questions section at the end of the book); Talks about God, praying, His plans, & forgiveness; 'H's are capital when referring to God; Some of the kids go to a Christian school & there’s a Bible class (some discussions/class parts are written); Mentions of God; Mentions of prayers & praying; Mentions of the Lord’s Prayer & giving forgiveness to others; A handful of mentions of a wealthy man going to take “matters into his own hands” since “he had a few issues with God—don’t ask how many issues God had with him” (but he starts to pray in a dangerous situation that he’ll give his money away if God gets him out of it, though later goes back and forth how much he’ll give (trying to bargain with God)); A mention of Sunday school; A mention of someone wondering if a dangerous situation would be good to “make sure things were good with God”; A mention of a Christian school; 
             *Note: A mention of Santa; A mention of an alien movie.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘birdbrain’ (regarding ostriches as a pun), a very long ‘blah blah blah blah’, four ‘dumbs’, nine ‘stupid’s, and a cut-off insult; Some eye rolling; One of the girls thinks there is a burglar breaking into their home (there is not…of the human variety, that is); Snide comments from a group of mean girls; Some of the siblings bicker, argue, and ignore each other; Nick is known to lie a lot (“if lying was an Olympic event, Nick could win gold, silver, and bronze—all at the same time”); Mentions of the possibility of an animal getting killed, hurt, or attacking someone; Mentions of a team of mean girls (they are rude to Jessica over her shoes and she is very hurt when Janelle doesn’t stand up for her *Spoiler* later, Janelle buys the same shoes so they can match *End of Spoiler*); Mentions of bullying & teasing (Hector, one of the boys, was suspended for making fun of another boy’s teeth); A few mentions of hatred; 
A couple mentions of rumors; A couple mentions of throwing up; A couple mentions of urine & poop; A couple mentions of a leopard eating someone’s pet parakeet; A mention of jealousy; A mention of a burp; 
             *Note: When it’s brought up about a giraffe giving birth, Hector says the ultrasound of the calf showed that “the thing is deformed” (his mother tries to correct his attitude, but he isn’t a big fan of animals because they’re “just…well, animals.”; He thought they shouldn’t “bother trying to save him—that they should just get rid of him and try for another”, but after seeing the baby giraffe, Hector encourages him); A mayor tells a female reporter that he “wouldn’t expect [her] little girlie head to understand the complex details of running a man’s business”; A man says that if it comes down to saving “some ignorant animal’s life or saving a human”, he’ll pick the human; A few mentions of when Hector was an orphan living on the streets of Bogota and another boy taught him how to hunt for food in dumpsters, gather cardboard to sleep on, and just stay alive in general; A few mentions of a car brand; A couple mentions of Arnold Schwarzenegger; A mention of an animal’s baby not making it; A mention of a brand name (Jell-O); A mention of the Animal Planet channel; A mention of the NBA. 
 
 
Sexual Content- A ‘chick’; A few mentions of a popular girl swooning over Nick & having a crush on him (she’s rude to the twins because she didn’t believe they were siblings); A mention of a kiss in a movie; 
             *Note: Helping a baby giraffe being born (border-line barely-above-not-detailed // semi-detailed); A mention of “people on TV always scream when they have kids”; A mention of Nick (a sixteen-year-old boy) being concerned with his looks; Mentions of a man’s skimpy swimsuit (and some people’s horrified reactions to it). 
 
-Winona
                               Most in the 1st P.O.V. of Winona ( otherwise told in a story telling format) 
                                                        140 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

I will say that this book felt a little all over the place, but I’m pretty sure that’s on par for this author based on the couple others book I’ve read by him. That said, I can see some enjoying this first book. I’m unsure of those sensitive towards adoption and disabilities will feel about this story, though, as there are some comments made (& corrected) towards people (and animals) with disabilities. I can see some being fine with it and others being rubbed the wrong way, so I really think this book is going to be a case-by-case situation. 

 

 

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, March 24, 2023

"Lights Out" by Natalie Walters

About this book:

  “CIA analyst Brynn Taylor developed a new program to combat terrorism, and she invited members of foreign intelligence agencies to America to foster cooperation between countries. Now one of them, Egyptian spy Remon Riad, is missing.
   Jack Hudson has been working for the Strategic Neutralization and Protection Agency (SNAP) for almost nine years and takes the lead in hunting down the missing spy. But he isn't at all pleased to find out Brynn is involved. It's hard to trust a woman who's already betrayed you.
   Every lead they follow draws them dangerously deeper into an international plot. Kidnapping, murder, explosions, poisoning--the terrorists will do anything to accomplish their goal of causing a digital blackout that will blind a strategic US military communications center and throw the world into chaos.
   Can Brynn surrender control to a man who doesn't trust her? And can Jack ever get over what she did to him? The fate of the world--and their hearts--hangs in the balance.”


Series: Book #1 in “The SNAP Agency” series. Review of the prequel novella Here!


Spiritual Content- A Scripture is quoted & remembered; A couple talks about God & trusting Him; Jack’s parents raised him knowing about the Lord, but after trying events, he started to question everything (thinking that it’s “easy to believe God was on his side when thing went the way he wanted”); Brynn makes a comment on why is God doing something to her (regarding to her life seems to be on tract, but then gets derailed); Mentions of prayers & praying; Mentions of God, trusting Him, & peace; Mentions of having faith; A few mentions of the armor of Christ & a Bible study; A few mentions of a man being Coptic (indigenous Christianity from Egypt) & has a cross tattoo; A mention of a missionary; 
             *Note: Mentions of Allah; Mentions of Allah blessing someone & Seif wondering why he isn’t blessed as he’s done everything right (memorizing the tenets of the Quran, fasted for Ramadan, and never missed a call to prayer), but is working two jobs to provide for his family; A few mentions of phrases meaning “God willing” and “If God wills” (regarding to Allah); Mentions of Muslim terrorist groups & Islamic extremism; Mentions of mosques, going to one, & an imam; A couple mentions of a prayer to Allah (by Seif); A mention of an American man giving his allegiance to a terrorist group and saying that “Allah’s will won’t be stopped”; A mention of Islam; A mention of someone reading the Quran; A mention of becoming a martyr (as a suicide bomber); A mention of someone believing that religions can coexist peacefully; A mention of making a deal with the devil; A mention of a group of people being like “cybergods”; A mention of a Neanderthal; A mention of aliens. 
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘how in the—‘, a ‘sheesh’, a ‘shut up’, and a ‘stupid’; A few mentions of curses (said, not written); Sarcasm & Eye rolling; Being held at gunpoint, Being held hostage, Being attacked, Being stabbed, & Fighting back (semi-detailed); Explosions/Bombs, A broken bone, Injuries, & Pain (up to semi-detailed); Finding bodies (barely-above-not-detailed); A car crash & Seeing car crashes (up to semi-detailed); Seeing someone pass out (up to semi-detailed); A near panic attack (barely-above-not-detailed); Seif smokes a cigarette; All about many, many mentions of terrorists, terrorism, violent extremists, traitors, plans of attacks, threats to national security, & cyber crimes; Many mentions of suicide bombers, bombs, explosions, victims, & deaths (up to semi-detailed); Mentions of 9/11 (including mentions of Brynn’s father being a firefighter on that day and seeing extreme grief from others); Mentions of wars & war zones; Mentions of deaths, murders, how it happened, & bodies (up to semi-detailed); Mentions of heart attacks, a death, & being poisoned/drugged, & drugs (up to semi-detailed); Mentions of deaths of loved ones & grief (Brynn for her father and mother); Mentions of human trafficking (men and women for work), illegal immigrants, & a sweatshop; Mentions of attacks, fighting, stabbings, being held at gunpoint, being held hostage, gunshots, injuries, pain, & blood/bleeding (up to semi-detailed); Mentions of crimes, violence, & protests; Mentions of extreme hatred; Mentions of car crashes & injuries; Mentions of a missing person; Mentions of children playing in a street almost being run-over; Mentions of cigarettes, tobacco, & smoking; Mentions of tattoos; A few mentions of torture & a picture of someone tied up and beaten; A few mentions of arson; A few mentions of lies & lying; A few mentions of nightmares; A couple mentions of kidnappings & killings; A couple mentions of the smell of burning hair, flesh, and bone; A couple mentions of a man slapping a young girl and her bleeding; A couple mentions of stealing; A couple mentions of throwing up; A mention of mass shootings (at concerts, churches, and schools); A mention of a boating accident & death; A mention of a burglar; A mention of a young woman looking like she spent all night at a club; A mention of substance abuse; A mention of bullies; A mention of rumors; A mention of jealousy; A mention of flesh-eating bugs; A mention of an eyebrow piercing; A mention of urine; 
             *Note: Mentions of cancer, treatments, & recovery (*Spoiler* Jack was diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma before joining SNAP *End of Spoiler*); Mentions of actual terrorist groups (ISIS); Mentions of equality in the workplace & Brynn being subject to old-fashioned opinions on it as she works in a male-dominated environment (including mentions of other women also having to prove themselves in a man’s world); Mentions of car brands; Mentions of a designer brands & brand name (Louis Vuitton, U-Haul, Colgate, Reese’s Pieces, Eddie Bauer, Tupperware &Tylenol); Mention of TV shows, movies, & characters (Gunsmoke, Grey’s Anatomy, The Love Boat, Dateline, The Princess Bride, Harry Potter, A Christmas Story, The Sound of Music, Independence Day, James Bond, Jason Bourne, & Jack Ryan); Mention of actors/public figures (Ryan Reynolds, Jason Momoa, Houdini, Groucho Marx, Jack Kennedy, Anna Wintour, & Will Smith); A handful of mentions of Uber; A few mentions of a sonogram showing a baby has a deformity & the doctor suggesting about abortion to the parents (the mother is distraught and the husband promises to do whatever he can); A few mentions of places/stores (Starbucks & Whole Foods); A few mentions of a baseball team; A couple mentions of Timothy McVeigh; A couple mentions of GQ & Vogue; A couple mentions of Google; A mention of someone feeling like they’re walking into the next Stephen King novel. 
 
 
Sexual Content- Staring at someone’s lips (twice), two hand kisses, a chin kiss, two almost kisses (one semi-detailed), and a borderline semi-detailed // detailed kiss; Wanting to be kissed (up to semi-detailed); Discussing a kiss (barely-above-not-detailed); Remembering kisses, almost kisses, & touches (up to semi-detailed); Touches, Hand holding, Electricity, Nearness, & Smelling (up to semi-detailed); Blushes; Noticing (including muscles, barely-above-not-detailed); a ‘hot’, a ‘sexy’, and two forms of ‘hunk’; Many mentions of dates, dating, girlfriends/boyfriends, exes, & break-ups; Mentions of kisses, kissing, & another’s lips; Mentions of flirting & winks; Mentions of jealousy; A couple mentions of Jack’s parents instilling in him to date intentional (which he thinks is “a difficult task given the dating world he lived in where singles liked their dates like they liked their food—fast and unfulfilling”); A mention of someone’s boyfriend constantly having a new boyfriend; A mention of a crush; A mention of Lyla wanting to find a “McDreamy”; Love, falling in love, & the emotions;
             *Note: A couple mentions of guys’ muscles (noticed by Brynn); A mention of “love [knowing] no age these days” in regards to relationships; A mention of a woman’s figure. 
 
-Brynn Taylor
-Jack Hudson
                                P.O.V. switches between them & others
                                                        322 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

Hmmm. I love the idea of this agency and plan to continue the rest of the trilogy, but I did struggle with this book for different reasons. 

A main reason would be the main characters: Brynn & Jack. 

I’m not a big fan of Brynn. She’s keeping a possible clue to herself because of the implications it could have for her if it is a national security concern. Her comments about working in a man’s world—while not frequent—were a bit much. 

I didn’t like that Jack was sort-of-kind-of-somewhat-just-friends dating a girl, but started to be re-attracted to Brynn at the same time. He and the other girl weren’t serious, but it still felt kind of weird to me. (I have to add that I don’t think it helps that I was unconsciously comparing him to the Jack Hudson from Sue Thomas: FBEye that my family recently binged and I much prefer that Jack Hudson.)

I was more interested in the other characters, which speaking of side characters, can there be a side story of Dr. Payne? He amused me.

Secondly, there wasn’t really any Christian faith content until pg. 164, beside a few mentions of praying earlier. I was expecting at least a bit more Christian faith content, honestly, so I’m disappointed in that. There’s some mentions of trusting God and Him being our anchor in a storm, but at one point Brynn feels like God was giving her an anchor in the chaos when she sees Jack’s gaze towards her, which kind of rubbed me the wrong way. Our anchor in a storm is God, not a handsome man you like. Later, she still feels that peace and says it’s the hope that only God could offer, but I wish the prior part had been clearer. I would be more likely to mark this as a clean read than a Christian one because of the lack of faith content. 

Overall? I’m pretty bummed. I had high hopes for the start of this series, but this first book definitely did not make them. 

 

 

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.

Monday, March 20, 2023

"After the Shadows" by Amanda Cabot

About this book:

  “Emily Leland sheds no tears when her abusive husband is killed in a bar fight, but what awaits her back home in Sweetwater Crossing is far from the welcome and comfort she expected. First she discovers her father has died under mysterious circumstances. Then the house where the new schoolteacher and his son are supposed to board burns, leaving them homeless. When Emily proposes turning the family home into a boardinghouse, her sister is so incensed that she leaves town.
   Alone and broke, her family name sullied by controversy, Emily is determined to solve the mystery of her father's death--and to aid Craig Ferguson, despite her fears of men. The widowed schoolmaster proves to be a devoted father, an innovative teacher, and an unexpected ally. Together they must work to unmask a killer and escape the shadows of their own pasts in order to forge a brighter future.”


Series: Book #1 in the “Secrets of Sweetwater Crossing” series. Mentions the town from the author’s previous series, “Cimarron Creek”


Spiritual Content- Scriptures are mentioned, read, quoted, thought over, & preached on; Prayers & Thanking God; Talks about God & trusting Him; 'H's are not capital when referring to God or Jesus; *Major Spoiler* The murderer says that God put him on the earth to stop pain & gives too much morphine to elderly people to stop their pain as God told him that they lived long enough since the Bible says a man is only meant to live seventy lives, and so God gave him the power to do His will *End of Major Spoiler*; Many mentions of God, Jesus, God’s children, His plans, trusting Him, forgiveness, & having peace; Mentions of those & events in the Bible; Mentions of prayers, praying, thanking God, & blessings over food; Mentions of blessings & being Blessed; Mentions of miracles & miracle workers; Mentions of sins (and some churchgoers not liking to hear about their own sins); A few mentions of Bibles & Bible reading; A few mentions of Christians & some not acting like Jesus would; A few mentions of public denunciation & how Emily’s father (a pastor) didn’t believe in doing that; A couple mentions of Christmas & Easter services; A mention of the nativity story being read at Christmas time; A mention of Heaven; A mention of a fire and brimstone preacher; 
             *Note: There is a pastor’s wife who is snooty & greedy; Mentions of a book about children and a witch in the forest (and when this causes a discussion, Craig says that’s it’s never too early to learn the difference about good vs evil, which causes a minister to agree but suggest reading “more appropriate books”); A few mentions of evil & an evil man; A mention of damning evidence; A mention of not being superstitious. 
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘stupid’, three ‘idiot’s, and four ‘dummy’s (most said by children referring to Beulah); A bit of sarcasm; Seeing someone who looks to have committed suicide (a family member, *Spoiler* Emily with her father, but she believes he was murdered, though no one will listen to her *End of Spoiler*, up to semi-detailed); Grieving (a mother, a father); Finding a body (barely-above-not-detailed); Craig goes into a saloon for answers and is offered a drink, but declines; *Major Spoiler* The murderer says that God put him on the earth to stop pain & gives too much morphine to elderly people to stop their pain as God told him that they lived long enough (he truly believes he’s acting on God’s command) *End of Major Spoiler*; Many mentions of murders, a murderer, suicides, their pain and unhappiness, & how it happened (hanging, gunshot, & overdose; including mention of those who commit suicide not being allowed to be buried in consecrated ground and the family being shunned by those in town, up to semi-detailed); Many mentions of deaths, bodies, fevers, & grieving (a mother, a father, a wife x2, a husband, a son, dear friends, & a close relationship with family members, up to semi-detailed); Mentions of an accidental death (from falling, Craig’s wife, which he saw happen, barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of a bar fight & death; Mentions of wars/revolutions (mainly the Civil War), battles, a plantation, injuries, & deaths (both physical and mental injuries, barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of Emily’s late husband’s abuse & her injuries (physical and verbal abuse & keeping things from her to keep her totally dependent on him and keeping her away from anyone else, up to semi-detailed); Mentions of injuries, pain, & blood/bleeding (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of fires, smoke, & a home being burned to the ground (up to semi-detailed); Mentions of saloons, alcohol, drinking, hangovers, minors getting into a stash of alcohol, & an adult drinking too much (after his wife goes on a trip); Mentions of vandalism by two school-aged boys who were drunk; Mentions of violence; Mentions of jail & arrests; Mentions of nightmares & screaming; Mentions of hatred; Mentions of lies & lying; Mentions of gossip & rumors; Mentions of bullies & teasing (including towards Beulah, a girl who looks and acts different); Mentions of Craig not having the dunce stool in his classroom or using a cane and/or ruler on his pupils (he doesn’t believe in public humiliation or punishments like beatings, which cause some families to question his discipline methods); A few mentions of stealing & stolen items; A few mentions of smoking & a pipe; A couple mentions of a fever & bleeding someone (barely-above-not-detailed); A couple mentions of jealousy; A couple mentions of eavesdropping; A couple mentions of a man trimming a horse’s hoof so much that it bled as a lesson to his wife to listen to him or else (barely-above-not-detailed); 
             *Note: *Slight Spoiler but Mental Illness note* The villain/murderer is revealed at the end to have a mental illness that was possible inherited from a family member *End of Spoiler*; Many, many mentions of prejudice towards a young girl who is called “simpleminded” (the parents don’t like her near their children (some acting like she has a disease or that children like her should be hidden away), and while some of the children ignore her, other children include her; Emily & Craig become her advocate and stand-up for her against those who are unkind and unchristian towards her; This is a major part of the book); Mentions of classic books & authors; A few mentions of Emily’s father not being her “real” father by others (he was her step-father and the only father she remembers); A couple mentions of some men believing that it isn’t ladylike for a woman to become a doctor; A couple mentions of some people in town believing that females are less valuable than men (which Craig disagrees with).
 
 
Sexual Content- A fingers kiss, a barely-above-not-detailed kiss, and a borderline barely-above-not-detailed // semi-detailed kiss; Recalling a kiss (up to semi-detailed); Wanting to kiss & touch (barely-above-not-detailed); Touches, Embraces, Hand holding, Warmth, Shivers, & Smelling (borderline barely-above-not-detailed // semi-detailed); Noticing; Because of her late husband’s actions and words, Emily fears men & flinches when they get close to her; Mentions of a man beating his wife for not giving him a son & her feeling like a failure because of his words and actions (barely-above-not-detailed, *Spoiler* Emily, who says he treated her like a broodmare *End of Spoiler*); Mentions of barren wives feeling guilt & that “no man could overlook” it (Emily especially feels this way as she thinks she’s not fertile); Mentions of a woman having many gentlemen callers at all hours of the night; Mentions of kisses & touches; A few mentions of jealousy; A couple mentions of flirting; A couple mentions of blushes; A couple mentions of chaperones; Love, falling in love, & the emotions;
             *Note: A few mentions of “women’s work” & work that men believe is suited for a woman to do; A couple mentions of some people in a town believing that a husband is “justified in disciplining his wife any way he chose” but the wife’s family protected her and wouldn’t let him in their house; A couple mentions of babies that died at birth or didn’t make it past infancy; A couple mentions of being childless breaking a couple’s hearts; A mention of a woman bitterly saying that she’s not meant to be a mother (because of her age); A mention of a woman’s curves; A mention of breeding horses to look a certain way. 
 
-Emily Leland, age 24
-Craig Ferguson
                                P.O.V. switches between them 
                                          Set in 1882-1883
                                                        345 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

{Trigger Warning for those sensitive to suicides and/or grief}

When I first started reading this book, I was concerned. Concerned because the first 70 or so pages are heavy with grief. I was honestly a bit worried how it would affect me, but I continued on to hopefully see happiness be restored in these characters’ lives.

I’m glad I did. 

This is my first book by this author, despite having some of her other books on my TBR for much longer than I’d like to admit. After reading this novel, I definitely plan to continue this series and while waiting for the next book to be released, see about reading some of her other books in the meantime. 

I think this cover is perfect for this story. The dark blue and overall ambience of the cover implies a deeper story within the pages. There’s a lot of heartbreak our main characters have gone through and continue to go through just in the first handful of pages. It was really hard to read at first, honestly. 

I would definitely put a trigger warning for this book as it deals heavily with suicide and grief. 
I liked both Emily and Craig, but it was hard to see the damage that has been done to Emily from her late husband’s actions and words. I wanted to give her a hug so bad. 

Time passed pretty quick in this book (over half a year in total), which is nice. It actually didn’t make their relationship or feelings for the other feel fast, which was interesting. It worked well and I think I was wanting to see happiness and would take any morsel I could get from these characters. (Side note: It was nice to see a widow man’s perspective and it not having him longing for female nearness/companion like most others I’ve read in a similar situations do. Points to Craig for that!)

I absolutely loved how Emily & Craig became Beulah’s advocates. Emily was so passionate and while kind, firm about the matter that Beulah should be treated like any other children as she’s God’s child, just like them. 

There’s a bit of a murder mystery, but it’s someone dear to a main character, so it’s more than just a sense of justice, but a determination. 

As the book continued, I was easily able to predict early on what would happen and was right on the dot, but that didn’t bother me so much, because I just wanted answers and justice. I will say that the ending wasn’t my favorite murderer/killer reveal I’ve ever read, as it felt similar to many other suspense books I’ve read. I did knock off a .5 star on my personal rating for it. 

I wasn’t sure what to expect this is new-to-me author, but I was pleasantly surprised. Despite being about a woman who was abused by her husband, murders/suicides, and a few other topics, it was all kept lightly mentioned on the details that could have bogged the book down more. I appreciate that and that all of those parts were more of a hint, than giving actual details, most of the time. 

 

 

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 Publisher (Revell) for this honest review.

Friday, March 17, 2023

"The Key House" by Mike Curtis

About this book:

  “After moving into a newly inherited house, the Noland kids discover clues to a supposed treasure hidden by their great-great-grandfather. But when town rumors and some spiteful neighbors suggest foul play was involved, Caleb and David set out on a quest to prove otherwise.
   With unexpected dangers looming large and threatening their mission, can the Noland kids discover the mysterious treasure or whatever lies at the end of their treacherous venture, before time runs out and all is lost?”


Series: Book #1 in “The Noland Kids Adventure” series.


Spiritual Content- Scriptures are quoted, referenced, & mentioned; A Prayer; Witnessing to someone who is cynical about Jesus and thinks Christians are hypocrites; Recalling events in the Bible & discussion it (Jesus calming the sea & being on the Cross); Talks about God, Jesus, believing in Him, & forgiveness; 'H's are capital when referring to God; Caleb spends some time Bible reading and reflecting on his pride and struggles with maybe God wanting him to change things; Caleb & David’s dad is a Christian professor at a local seminary; When the adventuring gets dangerous, it’s wondered if God decided that it was their time [to go/die] and that accepting it was difficult (but it turns out okay); Mentions of God; Mentions of those & events in the Bible; Mentions of prayers, praying, & blessing over food; Mentions of churches, church going, Sunday school lessons, & the boys’ dad guest preaching one Sunday; Mentions of the Noland family reading a Bible story book & devotion together before bed; A couple mentions of a man saying that he regrets not following Christ earlier in his life & a letter saying his hopes for his relatives know Him; A couple mentions of sins; A mention of Heaven; A mention of a relative being a man of God; A mention of the Pope; 
             *Note: The boys say that finding this treasure and putting the rumors to rest is their “destiny”; Mentions of rumors of the hidden treasure being cursed and/or haunted & that ghosts are protecting it (which the boys’ dad shuts down by saying that “the Bible says that when a person dies, they immediately go to their final destination. And that’s not earth. It’s either heaven or hell, depending on whether they believed wholeheartedly in Jesus to live for Him or not” and also says that those who believe in Him will never be punished for their sins; Later, they wonder if ghosts are protecting the treasure, but their dad says there are no ghosts, though, they do get creeped out on the thought of ghosts protecting the treasure; Anything that could be thought as a ghosts’ doing, it later explained and figured out what really happened); A few mentions of evil & someone being called evil; A few mentions of aliens (teasingly); A mention of the boys’ sister Lizzy giving them a glare that could “put even a demon to flight”; A mention of a “demonized” dog; A mention of all the rumors in town is not “gospel truth”
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘stinking’ and eight ‘stupid’s; Mentions of curses (said, not written by an adult); A bit of sarcasm; Almost drowning, Being thrown into rapids & Looking for others (someone doesn’t come back up to the surface and there’s a bit of grieving by a side character, up to semi-detailed); Fighting off a snake and large spider (up to semi-detailed); Being chased by a dog after trespassing (the owner encourages it and the boy wonders if he’s going to die, Caleb throws a rock at the dog and even though it was for safety, he feels guilty about doing that, the boys do not tell their parents that this happened, barely-above-not-detailed); A couple men try to intimidate the boys by driving straight at them (they are not hit by the car, but very shaken), later threatening them both verbally and with a gun; Caleb & David try to solve the mystery by themselves (they dad is only able to help them on weekends due to work, so while they aren’t lying, they don’t share what they’re up to with their parents and this leads to some dangerous situations and very close calls, up to semi-detailed); The boys taunt and tease each other (along with a couple threats from Caleb to David about listening to what he says); Caleb & David start to argue a couple times point, but their parents nip it in the bud; David has been picked on for his short stature and it greatly upsets him when Caleb taunts him about it (David goes to call him a “bad, disrespectful word” (according to their little sister), but nothing is said and their dad has a one-to-one talk with Caleb about putting others down and not being prideful); Later, Caleb humiliates his brother in front of his teammates and Caleb prideful of his baseball skills, which causes the coach to talk to him and bench him for his words and actions; Many mentions of gossip & rumors (including a rumor of those who looked for a treasure ended up dying and another about the treasure being cursed and/or haunted, and of others being murderers, barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of kids saying that a man is a murderer who “got lucky and got away with it”, that his dogs will attack anyone who steps on his property (including that his Rottweiler-pit bull mixed dogs took a boy’s leg off, which is not confirmed by an adult, barely-above-not-detailed), & him threatening the boys with harm if they hurt his dog or trespass again; Mentions of a car accident that caused the death of a parent, but many believe it wasn’t an accident; Mentions of an accident that caused a handful of deaths (and that some people still hold a grudge against the family that caused the accident, barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of people and pets disappearing into large holes/bottomless pits (up to semi-detailed); Mentions of harsh rapids, the possibility of drowning, thinking someone drowned, & vomiting; Mentions of injuries, blood/bleeding, & pain; Mentions of stealing & stolen items; Mentions of a guy trying to intimidate the boys by acting like he’s going to run over them with his car (they are shaken and their dad tries to find the man); Mentions of explosions; Mentions of hatred; Mentions of grief (of a mother, and a family); A few mentions of a shipwreck & deaths; A few mentions of an orphanage being raided by a pirate; A few mentions of lies & lying; A few mentions of smoking; A couple mentions of wars; A couple mentions of seeing a young man being aggressively put-down by another; A couple mentions of jealousy; A mention of a mission being called “suicide” by David (regarding a dare); A mention of about 70% of orphaned boys becoming criminals; A mention of David slugging a someone who called him a name (not a bad name, he misunderstood); A mention of David making “bodily noises”
             *Note: Mentions of a mother’s death from cancer & her son struggling since her passing; Mentions of brand names & items; Mentions of car brands; A few mention of characters & quotes from movies (The Princess Bride, A Christmas Carol); A couple mentions of ESPN; A mention of a MLB baseball team; A mention of a celebrity (Tony Hawk).
 
 
Sexual Content- When in the boys’ dad’s point of view, it mentions him and their mom snuggling in bed talking; A couple mentions of parents kissing (the Noland kids groan at it happening and when David asks if they have to do that when they’re married, the dad responds that he “may not mind it so much later”); A mention of about 60% of orphaned girls becoming prostitutes (a boy blushes when this is said); 
             *Note: A couple mentions of a man’s muscles flexing through his tank top (mentioned because of his strength). 
 
-Caleb Noland, age 12
-David Noland, age 10
                                P.O.V. switches between them & a couple others
                                            Set in 1995
                                                        236 pages


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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

I wasn’t sure what to expect with this book, the synopsis had me intrigued and the cover gave off a creepy element. It turns out it was a little more intense than I was expecting—particularly the last half of the story! 

I think I would say that I preferred the first half of the story because it really highlighted what I love to see in middle-grade books—a close family and that wholesomeness from the parents that care for their children and the children respecting their parents. If you’re not familiar with the middle-grade genre (Christian or secular), there’s not too many that have that element or have it done well, in my opinion. 

The second half of the story had a Indian Jones vibe due to the treasure and hunting for it, which some readers may love. Personally it was a bit much for me, but there’s also lessons learned within those parts. Though the brothers talk to their parents often and the parents are very involved in their lives and interests (they also homeschool), the boys do keep some of their adventuring a secret under the guise of not wanting to their hopes up. Some of this adventuring leads into some close-calls and dangerous situations, and once the parents are told, they’re proud of the boys for looking out for each other but will be discussing the fact they went without an adult later.

The faith content was solid, and I really liked seeing Caleb having a discussion with someone who doesn’t believe. There was good character development that felt very realistic for a boy Caleb’s age. 
Overall? Not bad. While I wish a couple things had been different or happened differently, it was a pretty suspenseful read for a middle-grade book and one I can see quite a few middle-grade fans enjoy. 
 

 

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.