If you follow Rachel McMillan on social media, you have most likely heard of some of her adventures. Now, she shares how you can create your own.
[Read more…] about First Line Friday: Dream, Plan, and Go by Rachel McMillan
*Inspirational and clean reads to remember and see
If you follow Rachel McMillan on social media, you have most likely heard of some of her adventures. Now, she shares how you can create your own.
[Read more…] about First Line Friday: Dream, Plan, and Go by Rachel McMillan
Happy Friday, friends! Can you believe that Christmas is only nine days away? Whether you’re enjoying a white winter season or just wishing for one, I hope the season is filled with love, laughter, and a little extra reading time.
Grab the book nearest you and drop the first line in the comments section then head to our host’s site at the Hoarding Books Blog and check out what everyone else is reading.
[Read more…] about First Line Friday: Welcome to Wishing Bridge (Travel/Winter Edition)
Let me begin with a warning. This book is not the Christian fiction I usually review on this blog. There is a smattering of foul language and several reference to sex (as well as a couple of scenes). But there is also a journey. One that not only takes you along the rivers from Paris to the southern wine countries but also of the heart. Of grieving. Of letting go and living again.
Jean Perdu has lived the last twenty-one years behind walls. His literary apethacary, a bookshop housed on a boat in the Seine, has remained moored to the same spot. As he prescribes books to his customers, he has yet to find the cure for himself. Living, feeling, is too hard so he creates a shell around his life and protects his heart. When a woman, Catherine, moves in across the hall, Jean gives her a table out of the room that has been concealed by a bookcase for two decades. In that table is a note that will change his life. A note from the love of his life. A note he has feared reading. A note that leads him on a journey toward healing, toward loving, toward friendships, and toward adventure.
The Little Paris Bookshop is a fast read as you travel with Jean and his companions (two cats, a young author just starting out in life) and meet the characters—and I mean that in multiple ways in some cases—they come across. With references to literature sprinkled throughout the book, readers will enjoy it. Jean’s story is one of grief, one of heartache and sorrow, but one that proves there is healing and hope on the other side. Even if it takes a while to get there.
****Blogging for Books provided me with a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest and fair review. All opinions expressed are my own.