First Line Friday

First Line Friday #284 | When I Come Home Again by Jennifer Rodewald

It’s First Line Friday! That means it’s time to pick up the nearest book and quote the first line.

Today I’m sharing from When I Come Home Again by Jennifer Rodewald, which I picked up on sale on Kindle a couple of months ago.

Here’s the first line from the Chapter One:

Saturdays were for relaxing. This was a fairly new perspective in Brenna Blaum's world.

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

Saturdays were for relaxing. This was a fairly new perspective in Brenna Blaum’s world. Well, new in the last seven years.

About When I Come Home Again

A tragic fallout drove them apart. Will forgiveness lead them to a second chance?
She’s moved on.

Brenna Blaum had been sure of three things in her life—her brother, her running, and her dad’s star receiver. But in a matter of a year’s time, everything she’d counted on fell apart, leaving her devastated. Seven years later, she’s stable again. She has a supportive boyfriend, fulfilling career, and close friends. She keeps her past heartache where it belongs—in her rearview mirror. Until the man who broke her heart finds his way back to Big Prairie.

He has to go back.

Craig Erikson had it all—popularity, success, and the love of his high school coach’s daughter. But after a year of mistakes that ended in a tragic accident, he’d left Big Prairie—the place he’d thought to always call home—hoping that without his antagonizing presence, Brenna would be able to heal. Now his mother desperately needs him, as do two young boys in her care. Craig has little choice but to return for good.

Can they live in the same small town without dealing with their messy past?

Unsure that she can forgive him, Brenna does her best to avoid him. Irritated that she ignores him as if they’d never meant anything to each other, Craig becomes determined not to allow it. Life in a small town forces their interaction, making them confront their unresolved issues and igniting emotions that have smoldered for seven years. As Craig and Brenna are pushed together, can they endure the hard places still littering their lives?

If so, is it possible to find their way back to love and home again?

Find When I Come Home Again 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!

Have you read books where you disliked the cover?

Bookish Question #276 | Have you read books where you disliked the book cover?

I’m sure you’ve all heard the old saying:

You can’t judge a book by the cover.

And I’m equally sure we’ve all judged books by the cover. In fact, savvy authors and publishers go to a lot of effort to design covers that will appeal to their target reader. They know we judge books by the cover, and they expect us to do so.

(I suspect the old saying dates from the time when all books were hardcovers with nothing but the title and perhaps a little gold leaf around the edges.)

If the publisher and cover designer have done their jobs well, readers will look at a cover and want to buy the book. That works in a paper environment like a real-life bookstore where the book cover (or spine) is the first thing you see.

It doesn’t work so well in an online environment which places more emphasis (in terms of space) on the book description and reviews than on the cover.

The result is that yes, I have read books where I didn’t like the cover …

Perhaps because it was already an author I wanted to read, or because I’d already been drawn in by the book description.

The other reason I might read books where I don’t like the cover is when I’m reading an older book. Cover design has trends. The older the book, the less likely the cover will follow the latest design trends … which is why authors and publishers will often republish books with new covers, to capture new readers.

For example, Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers has been topping bestseller charts for close to thirty years. Here are some of the cover designs I found:

Cover images - Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers

The oldest cover does look somewhat dated. The newest cover is the movie tie-in version, and I have to say it’s my least favourite.

But it’s the same book.

So yes, I have (and do) read books where I dislike the book cover … but they are typically books by authors I already know and enjoy, books I find on an online store such as Amazon, or books recommended by a friend.

In these cases, the book description is more of a selling point than the cover.

What about you? Have you read books where you disliked the book cover?

Book Review | I’ll Always Choose You (Trinity Lakes #3) by Lisa Renee

Leah Thompson has spent the last two years building her business, Trinity Organics. She’s fallen for Justin Perry, the town’s one-time bad boy (literally). But her father, the local sheriff, hasn’t forgotten Justin’s past, and won’t allow Leah to date him.

Leah is torn between wanting to date Justin, and honoring her father … who she trusts, and therefore who must have a good reason for wanting to keep them apart. The sheriff suggests Leah date other guys, no doubt hoping that will distract her from Justin.

Justin is serious about dating Leah, so comes up with a foolproof plan.

(Yes, well all know what happens with foolproof plans.)

Justin decides Leah should date someone who is even less suitable than Justin. Leah should start a fake relationship with Marcus, the tattooed Australian chef working at Trinity Lakes Summer Camp.

Everything goes as predicted … which provides lots of fun for the reader (and a lot less fun for Leah and Justin). there are plenty of fun moments, embarrassing moments, and a few misunderstandings in the path of true love.

What makes I’ll Always Choose You different from most romances is that we don’t see Leah and Justin meet or their initial attraction – they’re well on the way to love before the story even begins. But, predictably, the path of true love does not run smooth, and that’s what I’ll Always Choose You focusses on.

It’s a fun, quick read, recommended for fans of contemporary Christian romance.

About Lisa Renee

Lisa Ren’ee is a member of American Christian Fiction Writers and Omega Writers, Australia.

Lisa adores babies enough to have seven of her own. Recently, Lisa has taken up breeding Ragdoll cats instead of breeding humans.

The tribe lives in Australia, where Lisa and her husband enjoy their writing projects and publishing.

Find Lisa Renee online at:

Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube

About I’ll Always Choose You

Leah Thompson is the Sheriff’s daughter of Trinity Lakes, Washington state. No one is good enough for his baby girl. At twenty-four, she should be able to choose who she wants to date, but her dad holds Justin’s past against him.

Justin has loved Leah for years, the woman where no guy has been brave enough to pursue. Who would want the grumpy sheriff as their future father-in-law? No one is that crazy. Except Justin is crazy in love and willing to do anything to win Leah’s heart, even to set her up on a fake date with his neck-tattooed mate from Australia. Surely the sheriff will see Justin is the better choice for his daughter. Until the fake love triangle goes terribly wrong.

A forbidden love, love triangle, small town contemporary Christian romance.
Visit Trinity Lakes and meet the fun and quirky characters who value family, faith, and happily-ever-after.

Find I’ll Always Choose You online at:

Amazon | BookBub | Goodreads

First Line Friday

First Line Friday #283 | I’ll Always Choose You by Lisa Renee

It’s First Line Friday! That means it’s time to pick up the nearest book and quote the first line. I’m quoting from I’ll Always Choose You by Australian author Lisa Renee, the third book in the Trinity Lakes Romance series, which released this week:

Justin Perry slipped behind the Trinity Organics shop counter and took Leah's hand in his.

Here’s the first line from the Chapter One:

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

 

About I’ll Always Choose You

Leah Thompson is the Sheriff’s daughter of Trinity Lakes, Washington state. No one is good enough for his baby girl. At twenty-four, she should be able to choose who she wants to date, but her dad holds Justin’s past against him.

Justin has loved Leah for years, the woman where no guy has been brave enough to pursue. Who would want the grumpy sheriff as their future father-in-law? No one is that crazy. Except Justin is crazy in love and willing to do anything to win Leah’s heart, even to set her up on a fake date with his neck-tattooed mate from Australia. Surely the sheriff will see Justin is the better choice for his daughter. Until the fake love triangle goes terribly wrong.

A forbidden love, love triangle, small town contemporary Christian romance.
Visit Trinity Lakes and meet the fun and quirky characters who value family, faith, and happily-ever-after.

Find I’ll Always Choose 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!

Do freebies inspire you to join an author's newsletter list?

Bookish Question #275 | Do freebies inspire you to join an author’s newsletter list?

A lot of authors offer some kind of freebie or incentive to sign up for their email list to receive their newsletter.

Do freebies inspire you to join an author’s email list?

If so, what kind of freebie do you like best?

My least favourite freebie is a download that sounds interesting or insightful but turns out to be just two or three pages of sparse text.

My favourite freebie is a novella that introduces the author’s work … or perhaps even the first novel in a series. I find this gives me a good introduction to the author’s work. Sometimes that’s good, because I’ve found a new favourite author.

Sometimes it’s less good (for the author) because I decide I don’t really gel with their style, so I unsubscribe from the newsletter. Most authors do pay an email list provider, and their monthly subscription cost is based on the number of subscribers. I figure if it costs them for me to be on their list, then I’m doing them a favour by unsubscribing if their writing isn’t for me.

The issue is that I’ve downloaded so many over the years that I’ve learned I have to make a conscious effort to read the free book as soon as I download it so I know whether I want to stay on the list, and whether I want to look out for more books from that author.

What about you? Do freebies inspire you to join an author’s email list?

If so, what kind of freebie do you like best?

First Line Friday

First Line Friday #281 | Saving the CEO by Liwen Ho

It’s First Line Friday! That means it’s time to pick up the nearest book and quote the first line. I’ve just received a review copy of Saving the CEO by Liwen Ho, the first book in her new Kendall Family series.

Here’s the first line from the Chapter One:

The last thing Devin Kendall had time for was finding a wife.

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

 

About Saving the CEO

This matchmaker has finally met her match …

To inherit his family business and prevent it from falling into the wrong hands, Devin Kendall must find a wife. The only problem? He’s a workaholic CEO who can’t remember the last time he went on a date. The best solution? Hire his sister’s matchmaker friend to do the job for him. If only they didn’t get along like two dogs after the same bone.

If Scarlett Hayes didn’t have a bet to win, she would never have agreed to take on her handsome but incorrigible new client. Devin might seem like the perfect match on paper, but he needs plenty of help in the one area he lacks—romance. She’s determined to pull out all the stops to coach him, including taking him out on a practice date. If only the emotions he stirs up inside of her didn’t feel so real.

The more time Devin and Scarlett spend with each other, the more they realize they’re not so different after all. When they finally agree to work together toward a common goal, how will they handle the chemistry growing between them?

Find Saving the CEO 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!

How so you feel about welcome sequences when signing up to newsletters?

Bookish Question #274 | How do you feel about email welcome sequences?

When you sign up to a newsletter list, you often receive a few emails in fairly quick succession to introduce you to the author and their writing.

Newsletter marketing gurus will often call this the welcome sequence.

As a reader, the value of the welcome sequence is correlated to how much I already know about the author. If it’s an author I’ve read before and I’m joining so I don’t miss out on future books, then I sometimes feel like I don’t really need the welcome sequence … but it also doesn’t bother me.

If the newsletter is for an author I don’t know so well, then the welcome sequence is a good introduction to that author because it sets the tone for what future newsletters are going to be like. It may also provide insight into what the author’s books are like.

I generally prefer shorter welcome sequence for fiction.

Don’t drag it out forever. Instead, let me get on the regular email list so I don’t miss any of the announcements I signed up to receive.

I don’t mind longer welcome sequences for nonfiction, as long as there is a purpose e.g. the welcome sequence is actually a free email course examining some aspect of writing, editing, publishing, or marketing.

For example, my nonfiction email list (at www.christianediting.co.nz) has a two-week email course on self-editing for fiction writers, which is a combination of a freebie and a welcome sequence.

James Clear (author of Atomic Habits) has a similar welcome sequence, an 11-part course on how to build better habits that’s delivered over 30 days. He then sends a short weekly 3-2-1 email with useful quotes and ideas. Going back to last week’s it’s a newsletter I’m inspired to keep receiving because it’s short, regular, and interesting, and has an element of predictability embedded in the 3-2-1 format.

What about you?

How do you feel about the welcome email sequence you receive when signing up for an author newsletter?

Sometimes the reason is that you overextended yourself because you don't know how to say no

Book Review | The Broken Hearts Bakery by Carla Laureano

Gemma Van Buren is a successful Los Angeles divorce lawyer who refuses to represent creeps, cheaters, or abusers … until her boss requires that she be less selective in who she represents. Then she receives a call from her best friend, Liv, asking if Gemma could watch her teenage stepdaughter as Liv has been called to New York for a last-minute business meeting.

Gemma agrees and returns to her childhood hometown of Haven Ridge. She’s been home less than an hour when she runs into her teenage boyfriend. Given this is a small-town romance, they are thrown together in more ways than one, and sparks fly as they fight against rekindling their teenage romance. After all, Gemma will be leaving town again … won’t she?

The Broken Hearts Bakery is clean romance rather than Christian romance, and there are a handful of references that remind readers of the difference. There’s also a slightly magical element to the town, which is introduced in the free prequel novella, The Brick House Cafe, available from Carla Laureano’s website. I do recommend reading this first, as it introduces the town and some key characters as well as being a fun romance in its own right.

However, that gives the book a realism that’s often missing from Christian fiction. In the real world, people have problems, and teens often have to deal with what should be adult problems. Gemma, as the outsider with a talent for providing sweet baked goods, becomes a confidant. And that realism is the strength of the story.

Recommended for fans of sweet or Christian contemporary small-town romance.

Thanks to the author for providing a free ebook for review.

About Carla Laureano

Carla LaureanoCarla Laureano is the RITA® Award-winning author of contemporary inspirational romance and Celtic fantasy (as C.E. Laureano). A graduate of Pepperdine University, she worked as a sales and marketing executive for nearly a decade before leaving corporate life behind to write fiction full-time. She currently lives in Denver with her husband and two sons, where she writes during the day and cooks things at night.

You can find Carla Laureano online at:

Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter

About The Broken Heart Bakery

Fifteen years ago, the town of Haven Ridge failed its most important mandate—to be a sanctuary for heartbroken citizens in need. Now it’s getting a second chance to set things right …

When Gemma left her hometown of Haven Ridge, Colorado, years ago in a cloud of controversy, she swore she would never return. And she’s kept that promise, instead building her reputation as one of LA’s preeminent family law attorneys. But when her lifelong best friend begs her to come stay with her teen stepdaughter, Taylor, while she’s on a business trip, Gemma doesn’t have the heart to refuse. She’ll simply keep a low profile, do her honorary aunt duties, and be gone before anyone knows the difference.

But Haven Ridge seems to have a mind of its own, dragging Gemma unwillingly back into the community she’s tried so hard to leave behind and she soon finds herself caught up with new friends and old rivalries. When Taylor is the object of an ugly bit of teen bullying, Gemma does the only thing she knows how to do: ply her honorary niece with baked goods and words of affirmation. Soon, her temporary digs are ground zero for teenage girls seeking sugar and consolation for shockingly adult problems—which the girls soon dub The Broken Hearts Bakery.

Complicating matters is an unexpected reunion with Gemma’s high school sweetheart, Stephen, who is determined to change her mind about him, the town, and the nature of love itself. Because as it turns out, her niece isn’t the only one nursing a broken heart…

Find The Broken Heart Bakery online at:

Amazon | BookBub | Goodreads

First Line Friday

First Line Friday #280 | His Perfect Match by Aminata Coote

It’s First Line Friday! That means it’s time to pick up the nearest book and quote the first line. I’m quoting from His Perfect Match by Aminata Coote, a new-to-me author.

Here’s the first line from the Chapter One:

Brianna McPherson scowled at the top two columns of numbers on her laptop screen.

I can relate, speaking as as an often-frustrated spreadsheet user myself …

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

About His Perfect Match

They were two people who should not fall in love. But God had other plans.

Communications consultant Brianna McPherson would have a much better chance of rallying her fledgling business if her family would stop sending her customers who believed in the barter system. She needs paying clients or will have to close her firm.

Daniel Hutchinson’s church is in trouble. He has less than three months to get an influx of members or close their doors for good. When a friend suggests the free help of a brand manager, he jumps at the chance. He never expected to fall for the feisty consultant.

The last thing she needs is another non-paying client. Especially not the handsome pastor who’s messing with her head and making her feel all kinds of ways. If they can’t make this partnership work, they’ll both be out of a job.

But what if there’s something greater at stake? Like an unforgettable love.

Find His Perfect Match 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!

What inspires you to keep subscribing to an author's newsletter?

Bookish Question #273 | What inspires you to continue receiving an author newsletter?

What inspires you to continue receiving an author newsletter? That’s not an easy question, so I’m going to turn it around and instead share what is likely to encourage me to unsubscribe from an author newsletter.

The first is if I get too many newsletters.

For obvious reasons, particularly given the state of my overflowing inbox.

The second is if the newsletters don’t have any content I find useful or interesting.

Send me too many uninteresting newsletter, and I will hit the unsubscribe button 🙂

I’m also not a fan of too-long newsletters, which is somewhat awkward, as I suspect I sometimes write too-long newsletters. It’s balance – send the newsletters often enough that no single newsletter drags on, but not so often that readers feel like they’re being spammed.

So what inspires me to continue receiving an author’s newsletter?

  • When it’s not too long
  • When they don’t come too often
  • When the content is interesting and relevant

That means some book news, but a balance between the author’s own books, what they’ve been reading (because author’s should also read),and general life news.

What do you think? What inspires you to continue receiving an author’s newsletter?