Dr. Dorie Devries needs a place to hide and recover, mentally and physically, after a shocking attack–and the small town of Colby, Kansas looks like the perfect place to be invisible. But she doesn’t stay invisible to farmer Gil Howett and his two sons who live a mile across the way.
Dorie wants to be alone, but finds herself drawn time and again to the Howett men. Their care, understanding, and faith in her is exactly the medicine she needs to rediscover her personal strength, and the woman she once was.
From New York Times bestselling author Mary Kay McComas, PASSING THROUGH MIDNIGHT was originally published as part of Bantam Dell’s Loveswept line.
Mary Kay McComas is an acclaimed romance novelist and the author of twenty-one short contemporary romances, five novellas, and two novels. McComas has received numerous honors and prizes for her work, including the Washington Romance Writers’ Outstanding Achievement Award and two Career Achievement Awards from Romantic Times (one for Best New Novel and another for Most Innovative Romance Series). She has recently contributed to Nora Roberts’s J. D. Robb fantasy anthologies, with highly praised paranormal romance stories. McComas and her family live in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley.
"Passing Through Midnight" is the story of Dorie and Gil.
What a beautiful and heartwarming romance!
This is the journey of our heroine, an ER doctor, who moves to a small farm in Kansas to recruperate from a life changing accident. Scarred and traumatized, she hides herself away. That is until her neighbors decided to coax her out of her shell. This involves the hero, and his two sons. She soon becomes entangled in their lives, finds true love, discovers her priorities and has her HEA.
I really enjoyed this book. Be it the maturity of the characters, their honesty, love and bond, and how kind they were- it was just wonderful to read so much positivity. There was no drama, and the dilemmas were very valid. I laughed when the younger son called all the animals "Emily", and cried when the hero realized what he might have to give up. Both had gone through deaths and failed marriages, she was older, but there was no prejudice. I am also glad that her infertility was not made an issue and not followed by a sudden miracle.
I appreciated that the heroine was older and the hero was a bit younger and it wasn’t about them getting married having kids and living happily ever after.
I might read this again, just for the two kids, the younger one especially. He was adorable.
Meh. You know, when a romance novel sets up the major conflict as "Boy and Girl live in different cities, so this will never work out in the long run", and then the resolution is "I dunno, maybe she's going to quit her job or something?", I just want to punch the wall. LOVE DOES NOT ACTUALLY CONQUER ALL LOGISTICS AND CIRCUMSTANCES.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.