Married only a year, Grace worries about her marriage. She loves Billy passionately but doesnt feel worthy of him. When Billy decides to use his experience as a Great War flying ace to start an a
Linda Ford grew up devouring books and making up stories in her head—often late at night when she couldn't sleep. But she hadn't planned to write. Instead, she dreamed of running an orphanage. In a way, that dream came true. She married, had four homemade children, adopted ten and lived (at times, endured) the dream.
Writing first took her to non-fiction human-interest articles for newspapers and eventually a non-fiction book about tuberculosis set in the 1930s and 1940s (Touched By The White Plague). But romance had always been her first love and she turned to writing love stories. She is multi-published in the CBA market.
She lives on a small ranch in Alberta, Canada, where she can see the mountains every day. She and her husband continue to enjoy their children and grandchildren.
Grace and Billy moved to the wilds of Alberta so he could fly for living. Grace had to learn to do everything because she had led such a sheltered life. She struggled to feel confident because she felt responsible for her mother's death, and to blame for every bad thing that happened. God showed her she had to trust Him with the future and be at peace. This last book in the series dealt more with feelings of worthiness and how Grace's faith grew.
An OK read centered around a young man from Canada who flew planes during WWI and a young, very sheltered woman from England who met and then married after the war.