I *would* have given this book FIVE stars. I would have.
And I'm not one to give out five stars.
But the author BLEW IT entirely.
And I'm *A.N.G.R.Y* with her for what she did.
Lucky is a bull rider. His brother was a bull rider with him, but while Marcus was impulsive, wayward, alcoholic, promiscuous, and carnal, Lucky was 'the preacher' - always having a Bible in his hands, praying over all things, holding 'cowboy church' at the rodeos for people who wanted prayer or needed a listening ear.
And I *LOVED* him for it.
He's approached by Natalie at a rodeo, who claims her son is his (now deceased) brother's child, and that she needs help from him, financially. Except then the author chickens out and has the heroine find a safe deposit box full of bonds so - *la-ti-da, nevermind!* Because everyone finds lots of cash in happy chrischun world. (This is par for the course, with 'Love, Inspired', so no surprise there.)
But it's too late - now Lucky knows about his brother's little boy. What he *DOESN'T* know is that she's not the mother. Her cousin was a wild child who disappeared after dropping off an infant for Natalie to babysit three years ago (and she never came back). Natalie and her father loved the baby and kept it as their own... but she has no legal claim to the child, and is terrified that if Lucky finds out she's not Robbie's mom, he'll claim legal rights and take him away. Her father has passed away, and that's why she thought she needed financial help - until she didn't.
Lucky is enamored by the lovely Natalie and tickled by the sweet little boy, and he's been about ready to leave the rodeo for a while, so the idea of being a part of their lives. But 1) she's not a believer, and 2) she's not exactly his brother's type, and 3) he knows she's hiding something from him.
I was a *little* irritated that the author kept saying Lucky admired her for being straightforward and brave, hitting things head on... when the ENTIRE BOOK she's *NOT* telling him about her cousin and his brother, and the fact that she's a virgin (which, OF COURSE she is, this is 'Love, Inspired' - both of them are in their late twenties and never hooked up, ever.).
Don't worry - everything works out marvelously: Lucky wins his last ride, his relationship with his dad is healed, he falls in love, he's offered a small church to pastor in his hometown that was sitting vacant *just for him!* , and he has a little boy to love! Yay!
Except NATALIE IS NOT A BELIEVER.
AND SHE NEVER BECOMES ONE IN THIS BOOK.
She never accepts Messiah as her Savior, never comes to a living faith of her own, never makes a commitment to the Lord at all. What. THE. *HELL*?!?!?! My *gawsh*, this is supposed to be a "Love, INSPIRED" novel, and you're unequally yoking darkness with light??? SERIOUSLY!??!? NO!!! Absolutely not. Especially if Lucky is so very close to the Lord and deeply in the Word as the author suggests. NOT. A. Chance!!!!
Worse, the author twists scripture. "Ye shall know the Truth, and the Truth shall make you free" is not about lies vs. honesty - it's about knowing GOD'S truth, hello. I was so aggravated by the antics of this author, not only hooking up a man of faith with a lost soul but also taking scripture out of context and using it to further personal agendas... SHAME ON YOU. You had a beautiful story with more faith, more verses, more prayer, and more spiritual LIVING in it than any other book I've read since Grace Livingston Hill... and you went and SCREWED it.
I wish there were a way to rip something out and FIX this, but... there's just NOT. And I'm so disappointed. I mean, most 'Love Inspired' are so shallow and barely-there in anything having to do with faith, I just expect BS... but THIS. To bring me SO CLOSE to something real and inspiring, and then turn it around to show how rotten it really is?
I'm disgusted.