This series is mostly one long story which is built upon characters developed in a previous series (The Redemption Collection). This book has a huge climax, but once again the reader is left hanging by artificial contrivances. This is definitely a series to be read in order. As to characters from the previous series, the author fills us in on the important details, but as I was reading, I frequently felt I was missing something since I had not read the earlier books.
I said in my previous review that the author is a tease. The teasing continues big time. There are just too many artificial contrivances. The Baxter family continues to suffer near tragedies and hardships even as hope springs out of previous tragedies. If you tally them up, the list is huge, far more than any family deserves. I also mentioned previously something about Christian authors playing god, but I only hinted at how much I dislike it being done so obviously. It is almost ruthless. In the second book, I thought it was at least done with some skill. In this book, it was just too much, perhaps because of the cumulative affect from the previous books.
Many of the overall plot lines are predictable. It is very frustrating to watch the artifices that mean that several major threads will apparently not be resolved until the end of the last, the fifth book. Then I read in the author's note that she suspended this series because the publisher asked for a story not related to this series prior to this book. Publishers are cruel to readers. They don't care if readers wait years to see stories resolved. I guess they consider it good drama. Sometimes, as in a series by another author I began recently, the series is never completed for some reason. For me this generates ill will toward publisher and author. In this case, I have too much invested to give up and fortunately I didn't pick it up until many years after it was completed.
Once again the climax is compelling. But as I've said, you reach a point where it is simply too much.
The author paints the paparazzi in a very bad light. They appear as heartless and greedy with no apparent self control. One can almost envision locusts. In this book, Dayne's agent also appears in a very negative and stereotypical way.
This is a Christian book, which for me makes the teasing all that much more frustrating. But more to my point, I usually comment hear about preaching which some people, especially non-Christians, find distasteful. In many of Kingsbury's books, including the first in this series, much of the preaching occurs through the circumstances and not as much through speeches or monologues. In the second book, the preaching occurs both ways. In this book, there is a lot of verbal explanation or preaching.
But before you avoid it, wait. The preaching in this book is both central and relevant to the story. It also does a pretty good job of summarizing the Christian message, especially when taken together with the second book. If you have questions about the Christian message, don't avoid this book, or this series. The people in this series are flawed, but ultimately they often act to God's glory and to further his message. In that sense, they may even be a little too idealized. Every human being, every Christian, is flawed. But there are so many out there who are doing selfless things like many of the characters in this series. Some like Dayne's adopted parents put their priorities in places that many would consider wrong, but even then they are trying to act selflessly to put God first. I'll repeat it. Every one and every Christian is flawed. This book, this series, this writer, tries to show how God uses flawed people. The Gospel message is Good News that God has redeemed flawed people.
The author frequently uses scenes where God speaks verbally but inaudibly to more than one major character. Frequently. Does that mean that those of us who don't experience that are not Christians? (Rhetorical question.)
The author says in a note at the end that one of the more amazing miracles in the book is based on a true story she came across first hand.
Mature themes: there are unmarried people living together and obviously sleeping together, but no sex is described. One woman gets pregnant which presents a dilemma where the option of abortion is weighed against right to life. There is another situation in the climax where lives are seriously endangered.