Review: Attracted to Fire by DiAnn Mills Rating: 4/5

Special Agent Meghan Connors’ next assignment is the VP’s daughter, Lindsey. If she can get this job right, she may have a chance at the VP’s protection detail or even the President’s. She will not fail at protecting Lindsey from herself and from those who want her dead. However, Special Agent In-Charge Ash Zinders doesn’t believe women make good agents. Can Meghan and Ash get over their differences and find out who is trying to threaten and kill Lindsey? Lindsey is a wild child – she has been in and out of rehab for alcohol and drug abuse. She is taken to a Texas ranch to recover from a suicide attempt and be protected from those trying to kill her. Due to dealing with her sister’s past in rehab, Meghan is well-equipped to find a way to help Lindsey stay clean and hope for a new life. Ash must also find a way to work with the beautiful and capable Meghan who is quickly worming her way into his heart. Lindsey doesn’t know who she can trust with her secret but something must be done or more lives will be lost. Will she have the courage to face her fears?

I loved reading about the Secret Service and how everything usually works since I don’t usually read many books regarding them. I loved being inside the agents’ heads and imagining how they think and speak and feel. The characters are very relatable and the reader empathizes with Ash, Meghan, and Lindsey. The suspense was just right and the writing was well done.

The reason I gave a 4 instead of a 5 is because I felt the story dragged in the middle and I kept hoping they would wrap the story up soon. The hope of salvation is not as seamlessly woven into the plot as I’d like but it is clear and the characters do grow.

All in all I would definitely recommend this book, especially to those who like a good government mystery romance.

I received this book for free from NetGalley.com and Tyndale but I was not required to write a positive review.

Review: The Note by Angela Hunt Rating: 5/5

Peyton MacGruber is a columnist for “The Heart Healer” in the Tampa Times, who strictly writes facts with no nonsense. She is about to lose her job as a columnist if she can’t find a way to gain more readers – she has the lowest readership of all the columns. When PanWorld Flight 848 goes down in the bay, Peyton witnesses the loss and sorrow and does her best to help out. When a woman, who reads her column, gives to her a handwritten note of a father’s forgiveness that was salvaged by a plastic zipped baggie, Peyton knows her next column should be about searching for the person whom the note was meant for. This note may or may not be a hoax but in a time full of sorrow and tragedy, the hope of finding the recipient drives Peyton to write from her heart. With only a first initial to guide her, Peyton must investigate all of the passengers and their children to deliver a message of forgiveness and love, while she deals with her own feelings of neglect from her father.

I absolutely loved this book and I’m curious to see what Hallmark did with the story as a movie. I loved the character of Peyton – she was so real and had to deal with sensitive situations in her life. The story of forgiveness is beautifully written into this incredibly interesting “what-if” story. I was in tears by the end because of how emotionally attached I became with Peyton’s character. The note:” T- I love you. All is forgiven. -Dad”  was truly life-changing for the characters and the story will touch your heart.

I highly recommend this book! (I received this book through Goodreads Bookswap)

Review: Southern Fried Sushi by Jennifer Rogers Spinola Rating: 5/5

Shiloh P. Jacobs has everything — the perfect job, the perfect fiance, the perfect life in Japan — but when her estranged mother dies suddenly, Shiloh must travel to the South to confront her past. Shortly after burying her mother, Shiloh loses her job, her fiance, and is hopelessly penniless. Since her mother left the house and car, Shiloh must move into her mother’s house and temporarily build a life for herself in a world that is so different and foreign to her. The small rural town of Churchville, Virginia is southern to its core and Shiloh must learn to navigate the language and ways of her new neighbors and friends. As much as Shiloh has lost, she still searches for a purpose and a new job to pay the bills — she searches for the mother she never knew or understood and the life that she wants to live.

I thoroughly enjoyed this beautiful story of a young woman’s search for God. I loved how God’s story of redemption was seamlessly woven into the plot and how Shiloh learns to accept the kindness and forgiveness of people she makes fun of. Her search for her Savior is so real and heartfelt — I cried as she cried out to God for answers and healing. My favorite part of this book was that the romance is between Shiloh and God. This story is her journey as she searches for the God that her mother found and the God who changed her mother’s life so dramatically.

All of the author’s characters have depth and force you to fall in love with them. They each struggle and triumph in their own lives the way people do in real life. This book made me want to visit the South in all its glory. As a reader, I enjoyed the southern hospitality and food descriptions since I am unfamiliar with the South. I did find it a little strange that Shiloh didn’t know her U.S. history very well but the story was still a pleasant read. I look forward to the next book in the series, Like Sweet Potato Pie, when it comes out in March 2012.

I would definitely recommend this read to anyone who enjoys a story about a girl searching for God in an unlikely place.

I received this book for free from NetGalley.com and Barbour Publishing but I was not required to write a positive review.