Yea, though you walk through the Valley of Decision

Deb’s Dozen: We come to a Valley of Decision. Choose love or choose life?

Valley of Decision, the final book in Lynne Gentry’s Carthage Chronicles, is a fitting ending to this saga of time-travel to the third century. (Click picture to purchase.)

Maggie, daughter of Lisbeth (20th century) and Cyprian (3rd century), has read her history books and is determined to change history by going back to Carthage to save her father. Once Lisbeth finds out she has gone, Lisbeth and her father also travel back to third-century Carthage.

They arrive only to discover that Magdalena, Lisbeth’s mother and the elder Dr. Hasting’s wife, has been imprisoned for murder in the death of Aspasius, proconsul of Carthage. Maggie finds Cyprian and connects with Barek, son of the former bishop, Caecilianus, who is trying to earn his way back into favor after selling fake documents to the Christians. Cyprian has returned from exile only to find his mansion destroyed and the hospital therein full of the slain and to the news that Magdalena is in prison. Eventually they all find each other—then their trials begin as they walk through the valley their decisions have brought them to.

You will love getting to know Maggie better and watching her mature. You will empathize with Lisbeth as she tries to let her daughter grow up. You’ll learn about the dangers the Christians faced and the trials they lived through under the thumb of the Romans. You’ll want to read the whole series if you haven’t already—and get this book if you’ve read the first two. Valley of Decision: A Novel (The Carthage Chronicles) rates five stars! (Click link to purchase.)

Lynne GentryTo quote her bio, “Lynne Gentry has written for numerous publications. She is a professional acting coach, theater director, and playwright. Lynne is an inspirational speaker and dramatic performer who loves spending time with her family and medical therapy dog.”

Murder at the Courthouse—A. H. Gabhart

Deb’s Dozen: Who-dun-it? Murder at the Courthouse, a Hidden Springs Mystery by Ann Gabhart.

Michael Keane has come home to Hidden Springs, Kentucky, after a stint as a police officer in Chicago. He left the big city action because he didn’t feel he made a difference in Chicago. In his hometown, where he knows everyone and everyone knows him, he has carved out a comfortable niche and routine.

Comfortable, that is, until the day “Miss Willadean Dearmon found the body on the courthouse steps at exactly 8:59 a.m.” Assuming the man was drunk, she marched into Michael’s office to complain. Miss Willadean sputtered and fumed the man was so drunk he didn’t even acknowledge her! What poor manners—and he was a stranger too— she certainly didn’t know him! To stem the flow of complaints, Michael went out to investigate.
He immediately knew the man was more than drunk; he was dead.

So starts the investigation of the death of printer salesman, Jay Rayburn, and a wonderful study of the characters who comprise small town America. You’ll come to know and love Reece Sheridan, the old attorney who loves fishing more than his job; Joe Jamison, the barber, and his cat, Two Bits; Betty Jean Atkins, who works in the sheriff’s office; Aunt Malinda, who looked after Michael when his parents were killed in an auto accident and he was not expected to live; Reece’s niece, Alex, who Michael had known and cared for since they were teens.

I felt right at home in Hidden Springs—the town reminded me of my hometown. I wondered how folks there would have reacted in similar circumstances. Gabhart has written a great who-dun-it peopled with winsome characters you will thoroughly enjoy reading about. She manages to provide many twists and turns and red herrings and more bodies throughout the book. Although the story bogged down occasionally, I still find Murder at the Courthouse: A Hidden Springs Mystery (The Hidden Springs Mysteries)
worthy of four stars!

A.H. Gabhart is Ann H. Gabhart, bestselling author of many Ann Gabhartnovels. The popular Shaker novels The Outsider, The Believer, and The Innocent are hers as well as Angel Sister, Small Town Girl, and Love Comes Home. Ann and her husband live on a farm near the small town in Kentucky where she grew up. She does say no one was every murdered on her town’s courthouse steps, however.

For fun, Ann says, “I love to play with my grandkids. I like meeting people. I like going for walks with my dog. I like to talk to people about my books and writing. I love to read and wish I had more reading time. I enjoy church and all the “eating meetings” our little church has. I like to write in my journal. I enjoy getting to know my reading friends on my Facebook page.” (Ann H Gabhart)

Heather Flower: Who Will Capture Her Heart?

Deb’s Dozen: Rescued Indian princess mourning her slain husband has two suitors. Who wins?

1653 – Heather Flower, Princess of the Montaukett tribe of Long Island, has been captured by a rival tribe, the Narragansetts. Dirk Van Buren, a Dutch lieutenant, has been sent by the English to pay the ransom and rescue her. The rescue is successful, but on the way back to her settlement, Dirk falls in love with Heather Flower.

Heather Flower is in mourning for her husband, who was slain by the fierce Narrangansetts during their wedding ceremony. Heather Flower and several other Montaukett young women are kidnapped and taken away. The Montauketts live in harmony with the English on Long Island, so the English Captain Gardner and Wyandauch, the Chief, send the bounty to free Heather Flower.

As Dirk and his company ready to leave Fort Amsterdam, they are met by Benjamin Horton and his brother, Joseph, who have been instructed to escort Heather Flower the rest of the way home. Dirk realizes, as she leaves, how deeply he has fallen. Benjamin and Joseph are friends of the family who are to bring Heather Flower to her father’s home in Montauk, but Heather Flower demures and insists on being taken to her Aunt Winnie’s house in Southold so that she will have time to mourn and heal. As they are traveling, we learn that Benjamin too is in love with Heather Flower.

How will Heather Flower recover from her mourning and how long will she take? What about Dirk and Benjamin? Are the Dutch and English at war or not at war? What about the other Indian maidens who were also kidnapped? How will this triangle play out?

To Capture Her Heart sums up what the entire book is about—the attempts of Dirk and Benjamin to win Heather Flower. We are reminded about their goals in every chapter if not more often. I eventually got irritated at the repetion and the “pining” the guys seemed to go through. The book seems to start in the middle. To know the full situation and background, you need to have read the first book in the series, A Place in His Heart. The character of Heather Flower was the most complex—we anguished with her in her loss and in her indecision about what to do with her two suitors, both of whom she cares for. DeMarino does present both of the men fairly equally, although Benjamin gets more print space. The customs of the time are pictured, but I felt the living seemed a lot easier than I would have assumed given the period of history. I give the book a generous four stars. If you like predictable romance in a historical setting, you’ll like this book.

Demarino-29-200x300Rebecca told me at our interview at the International Christian Retail Show last June that the books are based on her ancestors, several “greats” back. Heather Flower is a legend of the time and Ben Horton is based on an ancestor.

Although the DeMarinos live in Washington State across from Portland, Oregon, all of her detailed research was done in Long Island. She feels a strong connection to her ancestors and is very interested in genealogy. Her ninth great-grandfather, Barnabas Horton, whom we learn about somewhat in this book, was a Puritan who came to the New World with the goal of establishing a church and ministering to the Native Americans. The first book in The Southold Chronicles, A Place in His Heart, tells his story. Her forebears have kept a strong grounding in the Lord throughout their history. Rebecca says, “Who we are today is so based on our past—we don’t even realize how much.” Our struggles with race and diversity are not so different from past eras. “We can’t change the past, but we can learn from it.”

Rebecca was born in Florida, but as her father was a Navy pilot, they lived all over. He retired her sophomore year in high school. Her husband, Tom, was career Air Force, so they’ve lived a very nomadic life, including seven and a half years in Nebraska. She’s learned to “see the good in every place.” Rebecca worked as a customer service agent for a major airline for sixteen years.

She’s always wanted to write a novel, but thought perhaps the genre would be suspense. She got a job with a literary agent which allowed her to: 1) Study the craft of writing—she read over twenty books in the genre; 2) Take classes and read books about writing; and 3) Join a writing group. Through an “angel,” she got a contract in 2012. Her first book was published in 2014 by Revell and To Capture Her Heart in 2015.

The takeaway Rebecca would like people to learn from her books is “God created us all and came for us all.”