Author: Iola Goulton

Do you look at authors' Pinterest boards?

Bookish Question #289 | Do you Look at Authors’ Pinterest boards?

As I said last week, I’m not a big Pinterest user.

I’ll often look at a new-to-me author’s Pinterest account to see if I want to follow it.

  • If it’s posting bookish information such as character portraits or pictures of the book’s setting, then I might follow.
  • I might follow if they’re posting about their hobbies … if our hobbies are similar.
  • But if their account is mostly repining things I’m not interested in, then I’m unlikely to follow them.

I usually find their Pinterest accounts as links from their author website. If I put my marketing had on, I think the content an author pins (or posts) should be relevant to their readers. It shouldn’t be dominated by their own hobbies or interests, especially if those things are not interesting or relevant to their readers (*cough* US politics *cough*).

It may be the way I’ve trained the algorithm, but I find Pinterest is mostly links to blog posts. On that basis, I prefer Instagram (which is more visual, as Pinterest was originally intended to be), or Facebook (where it’s much easier to follow the link).

What about you? Do you follow authors on Pinterest?

Who are your favourite Christian authors to follow?

Rachel was judging the book by its cover, she’d admit, but she’d seen a lot of books like Dominic in her time and the covers tended to match the story inside.

Book Review | Until I Met You by Lara Van Hulzen

Until I Met You is part of The Endicotts of Silver Bay series. I haven’t read the first two books in the series, which must be Chet and Meg’s story, but didn’t feel I was missing any information. That’s always a plus when reading a series out of order—there can be a fine balance between boring readers by rehashing the first/previous books, vs. ignoring them and leaving the reader feeling like they’ve gatecrashed a private party.

I loved the initial meeting between Rachel and Dominic.

So did Dominic … more than Rachel did, at least. There’s an initial attraction between the two (not my favourite trope), so I was happy to see their relationship was built on a growing friendship rather than on the initial attraction. I loved the dialogue and banter between the two as they work together on a fundraiser for the town community centre, where Rachel works.

Rachel also had a role as a volunteer chaplain for the local fire department and hospital. That sounded fascinating, and I would have liked to have seen more of her chaplaincy role—it’s not something I can recall seeing in Christian fiction, which feels like a gap.

Until I Met You is a fairly slow burn romance (my favourite kind) that hits all the right notes for a sweet, easy small-town romance read.

Recommended for small-town contemporary romance fans, especially those who like opposites attract or billionaire tropes.

Thanks to Tule Publishing for providing a free ebook for review.

About Until I Met You

When his parents move to Silver Bay, California, Dominic Endicott, ever the dutiful son, packs up his life and heads to the small town. He sees it as temporary, appeasing his mother and making sure his dad’s health is stable while Dominic keeps the family business running. Dominic planned on keeping his head down, focused only on working and spending time with his family. Until a beautiful brunette forces him to look up.

Local Chaplain and community center employee Rachel Anderson loves her little town that she’s called home for the past year. Silver Bay is a far cry from her life growing up in LA, and that’s perfectly fine with her. When she mistakes newcomer Dominic for her friend, Chet, her simple, curated life becomes complicated.

Thrown together to work on raising money for the town’s community center, the sparks between Rachel and Dominic are too strong to ignore. But Dominic represents everything Rachel has been running from, while Rachel has Dominic rethinking his entire life plan. Can these two bridge the gap between their worlds and give love a chance?

Find Until I Met You online at:

Amazon | BookBub | Goodreads

About Lara Van Hulzen

Lara Van HulzenWriting stories since she was a young girl, Lara’s dream of being a novelist became a reality with her Men of Honor series. An avid reader, she worked as a book reviewer for 18 years with various organizations. She has a BA in Journalism and a Masters of Divinity in Chaplaincy. Lara loves tea, baseball and living in Idaho with her husband and Great Dane.

Find Lara Van Hulzen online at:

Website | BookBub | Goodreads

First Line Friday

First Line Friday #296 | Where Our Hearts Lie by Jenny Glazebrook

It’s First Line Friday! That means it’s time to pick up the nearest book and quote the first line. The sixth book in the Trinity Lakes Romance series released this week, so that’s what I’m reading and sharing: Where Our Hearts Lie by Jenny Glazebrook. I think this is my favourite book of the series so far.

Here’s the first line from the Chapter One:

Why couldn't she stop shaking? Hallie took a deep breath and blew it out slowly.

 

What’s the book nearest you, and what’s the first line?

 

About Where Our Hearts Lie

Can two hurting hearts find where they belong?

Hallie Hollaway is the daughter of missionaries and a child prodigy who desperately wants to fit in. When her first meeting with an internet boyfriend goes horribly wrong, she escapes to her childhood home of Trinity Lakes. The only place she has ever felt safe and loved.

Josh Ladan is the pastor’s kid who once dreamed of following in his father’s footsteps. Until one tragic summer in Australia changed everything. Now Hallie, his clever childhood friend, is back in Trinity Lakes. Josh is closely guarding a secret that he fears will disappoint Hallie, but he is determined to prove himself to her.

Hallie is drawn to Josh, but holds herself back, believing she is unworthy of love. Can Hallie and Josh allow God to work in their hearts and lives to restore trust and hope for a future together?

Find Where Our Hearts Lie online at:

Amazon | Goodreads

Click here to check out what my fabulous fellow FirstLineFriday bloggers are sharing today.

And you can click here to check out my previous FirstLineFriday posts.

Share your first line in the comments, and happy reading!

Don’t forget to click here to check out my Amazon shop for my top picks in Christian fiction!

Do you use Pinterest to find bookish information?

Bookish Question #288 | Do you use Pinterest to find bookish information?

Like most social media networks, Pinterest is driven by an algorithm, which means it shows you the content you regularly engage with.

I tend not to visit Pinterest to look for bookish information, so I rarely find it. Instead, my Pinterest feed tends to be filled with recipes (sometimes useful), home renovation ideas (rarely useful), or fashion (pretty but not useful as most of the clothes aren’t available in New Zealand and the seasons are wrong).

This is where hashtags come in handy. If I was looking for bookish information on Pinterest, I’d have to use bookish hashtags like #AmReading or #ChristiFic or #ChristianRomance.

However, I tend not to use Pinterest a lot.  My go-to social media network is Facebook, with Twitter and Instagram taking turns at second place. I find a lot of bookish content on Instagram. I’ve obviously trained that algorithm better.

What about you? Are you active on Pinterest? Do you use it for bookish information?

Ladies of the Lake cover image

Audiobook Review | Ladies of the Lake by Cathy Gohlke

Ladies of the Lake begins in 1935, with the headmistress of Lakeside Ladies Academy in Connecticut calls to personally invite Mrs. Murray to her daughter’s graduation, even though it is over 800 miles away. Mrs. Murray refuses, and that is the first big question: why?

The story then skips back to 1905, when twelve-year-old Adelaide MacNeill’s parents drown, her older half-brother sends her away from her beloved Prince Edward Island and sends her to the Lakeside. There she is befriended by Dorothy, Ruth, and Susannah, and they refer to themselves as Ladies of the Lake.

The story flip-flops between Adelaide’s growing-up years at Lakeside and the present, where she continues to refuse to travel to the USA. We see her graduate, start work … and fall in love with the same man as Dorothy, her best friend. A man who happens to be a German-American in World War I … yes, there is every indication this isn’t going to end well.

The mystery unfolds as we move further into the novel, particularly as the past story comes closer and closer to the present. There was plenty of tension as I wondered when the present characters would work out what the listener has known from the beginning: that Adelaide is alive. But there were also a couple of unexpected twists, one that was revealed close to the end, providing the piece de resistance to an already excellent story.

The narrator did an excellent job.

The first few minutes felt a little stilted, as the story opened with a letter. But once she got into the regular dialogue and action of the novel, the narration moved smoothly. I was particularly impressed with her ability to portray the different voices–child, teen, and adult, male and female.

I’m not always a fan of audiobooks, mostly because they feel slow—I can read a novel in half the time it takes to listen to the audiobook (and I can’t take the audiobook reading speed much past 1.25 times or I start literally losing the plot). But Ladies of the Lake had plenty of mysteries and secrets to keep me engaged and did a masterful job of unravelling the secrets at the perfect pace to keep me engaged and listening.

Of course, the one weakness of audiobooks is that I can’t underline and share any of the great writing or lines I found particularly meaningful. You’ll just have to trust me: there were many.

Recommended for historical fiction fans, particularly Anne of Green Gables fans.

Thanks to NetGalley for providing a free audiobook for review.

About Cathy Gohlke

Cathy GohlkeCathy Gohlke is the three-time Christy Award-winning author of the critically acclaimed novels Secrets She Kept (winner of the 2016 Carol and INSPY Awards), Saving Amelie (winner of the 2015 INSPY Award), Band of Sisters, Promise Me This (listed by Library Journal as one of the best books of 2012), William Henry Is a Fine Name, and I Have Seen Him in the Watchfires (listed by Library Journal as one of the best books of 2008), which also won the American Christian Fiction Writers’ Book of the Year Award.

Cathy has worked as a school librarian, drama director, and director of children’s and education ministries. When not traipsing the hills and dales of historic sites, she, her husband, and their dog, Reilly, divide their time between Northern Virginia and the Jersey Shore, enjoying time with their children and granddaughters.

You can find Cathy Gohlke online at:

Website | Facebook | Pinterest

About Ladies of the Lake

When she is forced to leave her beloved Prince Edward Island to attend Lakeside Ladies Academy after the death of her parents, the last thing Adelaide Rose MacNeill expects to find is three kindred spirits. The “Ladies of the Lake,” as the four girls call themselves, quickly bond like sisters, vowing that wherever life takes them, they will always be there for each other. But that is before: Before love and jealousy come between Adelaide and Dorothy, the closest of the friends. Before the dawn of World War I upends their world and casts baseless suspicion onto the German American man they both love. Before a terrible explosion in Halifax Harbor rips the sisterhood irrevocably apart.

Seventeen years later, Rosaline Murray receives an unsuspecting telephone call from Dorothy, now headmistress of Lakeside, inviting her to attend the graduation of a new generation of girls, including Rosaline’s beloved daughter. With that call, Rosaline is drawn into a past she’d determined to put behind her. To memories of a man she once loved . . . of a sisterhood she abandoned . . . and of the day she stopped being Adelaide MacNeill.

Find Ladies of the Lake online at:

Amazon | BookBub | ChristianBook | Goodreads | Koorong

First Line Friday

First Line Friday #295 | Until I Met You by Lara Van Hulzen

It’s First Line Friday! That means it’s time to pick up the nearest book and quote the first line. I’m reading (yet another) small-town contemporary Christian romance. I seem to have developed a real taste for the genre. I wonder why?

Anyway, here’s the first line from Until I Met You by Lara Van Hulzen, the third book in The Endicotts of Silver Bay series. Here’s the first line from the Chapter One:

Rachel Anderson pedaled her bike toward downtown Silver Bay, feeling the caress of the breeze against her skin.

What’s the book nearest you, and what’s the first line?

 

About Until I Met You

When his parents move to Silver Bay, California, Dominic Endicott, ever the dutiful son, packs up his life and heads to the small town. He sees it as temporary, appeasing his mother and making sure his dad’s health is stable while Dominic keeps the family business running. Dominic planned on keeping his head down, focused only on working and spending time with his family. Until a beautiful brunette forces him to look up.

Local Chaplain and community center employee Rachel Anderson loves her little town that she’s called home for the past year. Silver Bay is a far cry from her life growing up in LA, and that’s perfectly fine with her. When she mistakes newcomer Dominic for her friend, Chet, her simple, curated life becomes complicated.

Thrown together to work on raising money for the town’s community center, the sparks between Rachel and Dominic are too strong to ignore. But Dominic represents everything Rachel has been running from, while Rachel has Dominic rethinking his entire life plan. Can these two bridge the gap between their worlds and give love a chance?

Find Until I Met You online at:

Amazon | BookBub | Goodreads

Click here to check out what my fabulous fellow FirstLineFriday bloggers are sharing today.

And you can click here to check out my previous FirstLineFriday posts.

Share your first line in the comments, and happy reading!

Don’t forget to click here to check out my Amazon shop for my top picks in Christian fiction!

If good intentions counted, she'd live a calm, ordered life in an immaculate home, cooking delicious and healthy meals.

Book Review | Imperfectly Proverbs 31 by Liwen Y Ho

Samantha Rose designs websites for mommy bloggers. When her archeologist sister gets the opportunity to go overseas for six months, Sam volunteers to look after her twin nieces, and sets up a joke mommy blog so her sister can see the children are healthy and happy. Unfortunately, a national newspaper somehow comes across her blog—which is full of perfectly posed pictures of happy children, healthy food, and a pristine house—and Sam’s blog goes viral.

But Sam is not a natural homemaker …

Sure, the children are happy, but their neighbour cooks the food, and the house is only ever pristine for the minute it takes to get the perfect photo.

Novak is a crime journalist with the newspaper, and his editor gives him an ultimatum: take a four-week holiday in Sunset Bay, interview the blogger, and write an article on her. Or he’s fired. So Novak is technically on holiday, but he does have this one article to write. His specialty is exposing fraud, and he figures Sam must be a fraud. She says she’s never lied. She just hasn’t told the whole truth, because the blog was meant to be a simple joke between her and her sister.

Sam and Novak are immediately attracted to each other, aided by two small girls who also fall for Novack and want him to stay. Sparks obviously fly, but there will be a showdown.

This is my favourite kind of romance: something that’s fairly low-stakes.

We know the hero and heroine are going to end up together (because otherwise it wouldn’t be a romance), so the tension is all built around a few key questions. When is Novak going to find out Sam’s secret? What will he write in his article? Given we know he’s going to tell the truth (because he always does), what will happen? How will they reconcile?

Okay, so there were elements of the story that were predictable (again, otherwise it wouldn’t be a romance). But I enjoyed the banter and interplay between Sam and Novak, I enjoyed the way the twins added to the story, and I loved Sam’s homemaker challenge of baking the perfect pie.

There’s also subtle underlying message about how we think of ourselves and how we define success. No, the ability to bake the perfect pie does not make someone the perfect person. Instead, we have to lean into the gifts God has given us … and that’s a good message for us all.

Recommended for rom-com fans.

About Liwen Ho

Author Photo: Liwen HoLiwen Y. Ho works as a chauffeur and referee by day (AKA being a stay at home mom) and an author by night. She writes sweet and inspirational contemporary romance infused with heart, humor, and a taste of home (her Asian roots).

In her pre-author life, she received a Master’s degree in Marriage and Family Therapy from Western Seminary, and she loves makeovers of all kinds, especially those of the heart and mind. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her techie husband and their two children, and blogs about her adventures as a recovering perfectionist

You can find Liwen Ho online at:

Website | Facebook | Twitter

About Imperfectly Proverbs 31

Journalist Daniel Novak is on a forced vacation with just one assignment: interview blogger Samantha Rose, who is looking after her nieces while her sister is temporarily working overseas.

Here’s the book description:

She’s trying to be what she’s not. He’s where he doesn’t want to be.

To help her archeologist sister, geeky Samantha Rose agrees to swap her black T-shirts and diet of pizza and ice-cream for a pretty apron and a summer caring for her adorable twin nieces and their newfoundland dog in Huckleberry Lake, Idaho. How hard can it be?

When Perfectly Proverbs 31, the blog she starts to reassure her sister, goes viral and everyone believes she really is a wonderful homemaker, Sam reluctantly needs to keep up the pretense. If she doesn’t, she risks ruining everyone’s summer. The girls’ oh-so-capable and over-protective grandma will surely swoop in to take them away from her.

Forced by his boss to interview Sam then take a vacation, a month at the lake with nothing to do but write a fluff piece is burned-out city crime journalist Daniel Novak’s worst nightmare. But he finds Samantha surprising and delightful, as her attempts to impress him with a picnic go horribly wrong. Time with her could restore his lost faith in people — and in God. Except, he has to write the truth in his article.

Can Ms Klutz-in-the-Kitchen transform herself to a Proverbs 31 woman in time to stop him revealing her blog is a fake? And what will happen to their growing love when he does.

Find Imperfectly Proverbs 31 online at:

Amazon | BookBub | Goodreads

First Line Friday

First Line Friday #294 | The Christmas Box by Jessica Wakefield

It’s First Line Friday! That means it’s time to pick up the nearest book and quote the first line. I’ve just bought The Christmas Box by debut Australian author Jessica Wakefield. It’s three novellas featuring three of my favourite tropes: friends to more, forced proximity, and fake relationship. Here’s the first line from the Chapter One:

Change was coming. Amy Franklin hated change.

I only have to read that much to know I’m going to love Amy 🙂

What’s the book nearest you, and what’s the first line?

About The Christmas Box

Three Christmas Novellas: Can Christmas be saved by a mysterious box? Join three couples across three decades as they find love in places they least expected it.

1995: Braving Christmas

Amy Franklin is in love with her best friend. Years of family rejection have left her unable to tell Chris Lawrence how she feels for fear of history repeating itself. But as she becomes the key to saving his family’s Christmas tree farm, she realizes teaming up with Chris permanently might just be worth being brave after all.

2005: Risking Christmas

Holed up in a cabin in Connecticut during a blizzard, chef Josh Keller is looking to finish a proposal for his new restaurant. But he didn’t count on getting snowed in with Nicole Abbot, the very food critic who derailed his career faster than you can say master chef. As the days drift by, Josh and Nicole form a tentative truce that might just turn into more.

2015: Faking Christmas

Antonia Katsaros needs a fake boyfriend to attend her sister’s Christmas-themed engagement party, or she’ll never hear the end of it from her meddling family. In the mall, she meets Dylan Matthews, a guy more than ready to help the woman who helped his niece. Can their fake relationship turn real just in time for the holidays?

Find The Christmas Box online at:

Amazon | Goodreads

Click here to check out what my fabulous fellow FirstLineFriday bloggers are sharing today.

And you can click here to check out my previous FirstLineFriday posts.

Share your first line in the comments, and happy reading!

Don’t forget to click here to check out my Amazon shop for my top picks in Christian fiction!

Do you like authors responding to your reviews on social media?

Bookish Question #286 | Do you like authors responding to your reviews on social media?

Do I like authors responding to my reviews on social media?

If they’re saying thank you, then yes.

If I tagged them in the review (perhaps because I was part of their street team), then yes.

If you’re not sure what a street team is, then check out this post:

What are the benefits of joining an author’s street team?

And if you’d like to be part of my review team then email me via the contact form above.

If they are criticising my review, then no.

I don’t tag authors on critical or even positive reviews (unless I’m part of their street team), so it feels slightly stalkerish if they find my review then find me and comment on the review.

I’m also happy when an author does respond to a review.

An author who takes the time to say thank you or who reposts or retweets my review earns my gratitude … and makes me a lot more likely to read and reviews their next book.

What about you? Do you like authors responding to your reviews on social media?