The Healer vs. the Lawyer. Energy healer, Persephone Jones, has a new neighbor in Peeler, Oklahoma—hot shot lawyer, Jason Brooks. They meet in June; it would take a miracle to bring these two together by Christmas. She bans white sugar; he’s a chocolate cookie connoisseur. She’s about saving Mother Earth while he protects the interests of Big Business. Their attraction is mutual, but disturbing. And life gets even more complicated when the whole town is caught in a conflict that pits these two on opposite sides of a political fence….Foreword Magazine says AIN’T LOVE GRAND? is “written with a fresh voice, an impeccable sense of comedic timing, vivid narrative, and fascinating characters.”
Dana Taylor writes uplifting stories filled with inspiration and humor. Born and raised in California, she graduated from the University of Redlands. She lived for many years in Oklahoma and raised two daughters with her husband. She is a level II Reiki therapist. Her love of music is currently reflected in her work as the President of the Board of the La Mirada Symphony in Southern California.
She has been published in various magazines, including the Ladies Home Journal. She hosted the Internet radio program Definitely Dana! at HealthyLife.net. and won various contests with the Romance Writers of America, including Best First Book from the Desert Quill Awards. She has been posted on the Amazon Movers and Shakers List. Ever-Flowing Streams recently received 1st Place in the Religion & Spirituality Category of the E-Festival of Words Awards. "Jaguar Jack" was named a 2013 EPIC Award Finalist. She also runs the women's fiction blogsite www.BookLuvinBabes.com.
Ain't Love Grand is more than a romance. It's also a story about friends and family and place and values. It's about love happening between two people with different values and lives. Jason Brooks is a divorced, fast track lawyer who barely has time for his rebellious thirteen-year-old daughter and his slightly dotty mother. Persephone Jones is an herbalist and a healer who's never quite gotten on the track.
Despite their differences - or maybe because of them - I was aching for them to realize they belong together. Maybe they don't complete each other, but they're like parts of the puzzle that fit. And it's a puzzle that includes all the important people in their lives.
I didn't want to stop reading book this book. When it was over, it left me with a warm glow inside. This is a "keeper" book that you'll want to read more than once.
Persephone Jones is a beautiful, earnest character who embraces every bit of herself. Which is not to say she’s perfect - but she does try to be as honest with herself as possible, lives cleanly and close to the ground, and is as compassionate as they come. She’s a healer and an herbalist, living in her family home with her cat, Orion.
Enter Jason Brooks, rich, cranky, high profile defense attorney complete with angry teenage daughter and lushy, adorable, forgetful mother.
What follows is a journey of discovery, misunderstanding, a good deal of humor, and passion - for each other and for their values. This book is entwined with solid, natural spirituality, loyal friendships, and pure love, and makes the reader believe that indeed, anything in life is possible.
This was a very unusual romance novel, and I'm of two minds whether I think it was brilliantly unique or didn't quite hit the mark. A bit of both, probably.
The protagonist, Persephone Jones, is a young, effectively widowed, churchgoing new-agey herbalist/healer/health food store operator in tiny Peeler, Oklahoma, just outside Okalahoma City. The Oklahoma City bombing is still pretty fresh in people's minds. The town of Peeler is struggling economically, and yet somehow Persephone's health food business still pays her bills. Just. Perse's new neighbour Jason Brooks is a buttoned-down city attorney with a 28th floor office and a profile to match, a scandalous ex-wife, a rebellious teenage daughter, and an increasingly forgetful mother. They couldn't be more opposite, and therein lies the romantic conflict. Persephone is at last open again to love, and ready to commit herself, body and soul, to love in all its untidy glory. Jason's last marriage was based on mutual ambition and business partnership, and the very idea of falling in love with someone as unconventional as Persephone makes him profoundly squirmy. As romantic setups go, it was pretty unique and interesting and quite funny.
The characters aren't always fully rounded, though the protagonists get proportionately more attention than any of the secondary or tertiary ones. We are offered information about Persephone (e.g., that she's illegitimate) that doesn't really come into play in the scope of the novel, and yet I found myself wanting more information - or context - for other aspects of her life (e.g., her lifelong conflict with nemesis Charlene).
The primary (non-romantic) conflict in the novel relates to a proposed hog farm, and although the matter was obviously thoroughly researched, the subject didn't always flow organically in the narrative. Ditto herbalism and natural healing. Swathes of text on each of these subjects, while interesting, read more like educational material than romantic fiction.
There were other glitches in the text, too, from minor lapses of tense to big, eye-roll-inducing uses of the wrong word. This may be the fault of the editor rather than the author, but someone deserves to be smacked to saying that three people in a room "presented quite a tabloid" (should be 'tableau'), or that a character who is unwell was "looking piqued again" - this may be the universe trying to balance out all the instances of "his/her interest was peaked", I suppose.
Overall, this book scores high for originality, but loses points here and there.
"Ain't Love Grand" pulls you right in with it's very likeable heroine, Perse Jones, who though a spinster, is definitely not a pushover and knows how to stand for what she wants. Mr. Jason Brooks, her neighbor, at first comes over as the cold calculating lawyer who would do anything to win, but slowly the author pulls back his layers and you realize this guy does have a heart. The question becomes whether Perse and Jason's hearts fit together between the fighting over the small town, his past relationship ghosts, and their personality differences. It's not an easy road, but Dana Taylor handles it superbly in an entertaining romance that's as wise as it is funny.
When hot-shot lawyer Jason Brooks moves in next door to Perse Jones their worlds are about to turn upside down. They couldn't be more different, Perse is into herbal remedies and nature, Jason is into modern and fast living, and a new hog farm coming to town makes them realize just what different values they have in life. But they can't ignore the attraction between them as Perse slowly becomes a part of Jason's life...
This is a really sweet romance - likeable characters, some great one-liners, engrossing writing, and a fun read.
Seems romance novels aren't really my thing. I didn't expect the story to be quite so religious, I found that aspect of the book a little overwhelming & turned me off a story that otherwise I thought was quite fun.