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The Christian Lover

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Marriage is under attack now more than ever. Even within the church, homosexuality, divorce, and shallow, sentimental views of love are subverting God’s design for husbands and wives. To help Christian couples counter these trends and recover marriage as God intended it, Dr. Michael A.G. Haykin has compiled a rich anthology of love letters from saints of the past. Each letter gives us a glimpse of what marriage should joyful companionship, deep passion, and unfailing commitment through the ups and downs of life. At its best, Christian marriage is a foretaste of eternal bliss—and it’s far more satisfying than any of the substitutes this world has to offer.

100 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 31, 2009

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About the author

Michael A.G. Haykin

221 books75 followers
Dr. Michael A.G. Haykin is the Professor of Church History and Biblical Spirituality and Director of The Andrew Fuller Center for Baptist Studies at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.

He is also the editor of Eusebeia: The Bulletin of The Andrew Fuller Center for Baptist Studies. His present areas of research include 18th-century British Baptist life and thought, as well as Patristic Trinitarianism and Baptist piety.

Haykin is a prolific writer having authored numerous books, over 250 articles and over 150 book reviews. He is also an accomplished editor with numerous editorial credits.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews
Profile Image for Kaetlyn Anne.
79 reviews737 followers
June 8, 2023
In a culture of disappearing snapchats and texts that send at the speed of light, we have truly lost the beauty and ability to communicate in this way, let alone romantically. Letters are a precious legacy for future generations to see the tender love between two saints. This needs to be revived!
Profile Image for Josh.
83 reviews9 followers
October 17, 2013
"Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself for her, that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word." (Ephesians 5:25-26). The Christian Lover: The Sweetness of Love and Marriage in the Letters of Believers takes a unique look at love and marriage within some of Christian history's greatest theologians. One of the things that is so neat about being able to read letters that were either written from one spouse to another, or were written from one spouse to a friend about their spouse (as is the case of John Calvin's letters about his wife), is that you get to see raw human emotions at work. Sometimes, we are predisposed to think of guys like John Calvin like they are unfeeling theologians who sit in their studies all day long and only take breaks long enough to use the restroom before heading back to their theological studies. Mr. Haykin's book brings a level of humanity to these theologians that the church has been lacking for quite some time, and for that I am truly grateful to him. Each chapter has a brief biographical glimpse at the theologian and his ministry and also tells somewhat of the backstory on how he and his wife came to meet and get married.

- Chapter 1: Martin & Katharina Luther - One of the things that stands out the most in Martin Luther's love letters to his wife is his ardent sense of humor. He tenderly poked fun at his wife Katharina as evidenced by his addressing her as "...the holy lady, full of worries, Mrs. Katharina, doctor, the lady of Zolsdorf at Wittenberg, my gracious, dear mistress of the house." He even pokes fun at her for worrying so much that it caused a fire to occur right outside of Martin's room one night that almost killed him, and that the worry also almost caused a stone to fall on his head.

- Chapter 2: John & Idelette Calvin - Calvin's deep love for his wife is truly evident in the way he writes about her soon after her death to his close friends and colleagues, Pierre Viret and Guillaume Farel, "I have been bereaved of the best companion of my life, of one who, had it been so ordered, would not have been the willing sharer of my indigence, but even of my death. During her life she was the faithful helper of my ministry. From her I never experienced the slightest hindrance."

- Chapter 3: John & Lucy Hutchinson - John was the Puritan military commander of Nottingham during the British Civil Wars, who played a significant role in the death of Charles I in 1649. He was eventually arrested on suspicion of plotting against the government and imprisoned in Sandown Castle, Kent, where he succumbed to death by fever. John's wife, Lucy, wanted to vindicate her husband by pulling together a memoir in his honor. The memoir is a beautiful picture of the passion that existed in the marriage between two Puritans. "...never a man had a greater passion for a woman, nor a more honourable esteem of a wife;"

- Chapter 4: Philip & Mercy Doddridge – Philip was a pastor, teacher, and author with both puritan roots and broad Calvinistic beliefs. His letters to his wife are filled with deep longings and desires to be present with his wife. “I am now at the greatest distance from you in person than I ever was, or I hope I ever shall be, for it is more than two hundred miles, yet I was never nearer to you in affection, and perhaps never more sensible of my happiness in being so near to you in relation.”

- Chapter 5: Benjamin Beddome & Anne Steele – Both were Calvinistic Baptist hymn writers who lived in the 18th century whose hymns were very instrumental in revitalizing the English Calvinistic Baptist community. Anne was chronically ill and never traveled far from home for the majority of her life. However, that didn’t stop her from writing hymns that deeply impacted people for the cause of Christ. The interesting thing about this love story is that it seems that Benjamin actually proposed to Anne Steele in 1742 and was rejected by Anne. Benjamin went on to marry Elizabeth Bothwell and Anne remained a widow. Benjamin’s letters to Anne are full of poetry and tell the story of a man smitten with a woman who would eventually break his heart.

Chapter 6: Henry & Eling Venn – Pastor of a parish in Huddersfield whose church saw tremendous growth during his ministry. History shows that during one 3 year span there were around 900 conversions under his preaching. Eling, Henry’s wife, died in 1767, and he eventually went on to remarry. The letter included in this book from Henry to Eling shows a man so passionate for the things of God, and desirous to stir up Eling’s affections for God before really dealing with his love for her and her love for him.

Chapter 7: Thomas & Sally Charles – Thomas was a Welsh Calvinistic Methodist who married Sally Jones, a shopkeeper’s daughter from Bala, North Wales. One of the letters included in this book shows that Sally did not reciprocate Thomas’ affections at first, but that did not stop him from continuing to pursue her and eventually win her hand in marriage. “Such an unexpected address from a person who never saw you but once, and that at such a long interval of time, will I suppose at first not a little surprise you. However I flatter myself that thus circumstanced it comes with the more recommendation, when I assure you that long as the interval is since I had the pleasure of seeing you, you have not been absent from my mind for a whole day, from that time to this.”

Chapter 8: Samuel & Sarah Pearce – Samuel was the son of Baptist parents born in Plymouth, and the congregation where his family attended church soon realized that God had gifted him for ministry. He went off to school, graduated, and took his one and only ministry at Cannon Street Baptist Church in Birmingham where he was blessed with an extremely fruitful ministry. His affection for his wife, and dearest friend, Sarah is easily seen in the following snippet from a letter, “Were I averse to writing . . . one of your dear Epistles could not fail of conquering the antipathy and transforming it into desire. The moment I peruse a line from my Sarah, I am inspired at the propensity which never leaves me, till I have thrown open my whole heart, and returned a copy of it to the dear being who long since compelled it to a voluntary surrender, and whose claims have never since been disputed.”

Chapter 9: Adoniram & Ann Judson: English speaking missionaries to Burma. The letters included in this book were both written before their marriage. One of the neatest letters in this entire book is the one that Adoniram wrote to Ann’s dad, John Hasseltine, asking for John’s blessing over their marriage and his willingness to let Ann go with him to a foreign country and lay down their lives for the sake of the Gospel.

Chapter 10: John & Lottie Broadus – John was a pastor for a number of years at Charlottesville Baptist Church before joining James P. Boyce in founding Southern Baptist Theological Seminary where he taught New Testament and homiletics. John is very open and honest about both his love for Lottie, and his need for her in his life on a daily basis.

Chapter 11: Martyn & Bethan Lloyd-Jones – I personally love Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, and his ministry has had a resounding effect upon me. However, I honestly knew very little about his wife, so it was neat to hear her story and she the kind of impact that she had on “The Doctor”. “As I have told you many, many times, the passing of the years does nothing but deepen and intensify my love for you. When I think of those days in London in 1925 and ’26, when I thought that no greater love was possible, I could laugh. But honestly, during this last year I had come to believe that it was not possible for a man to love his wife more than I loved you. And yet I see that there is no end to love, and that it is still true that “absence makes the heart grow fonder.”

- Chapter 12: Helmuth & Freya Von Moltke – Helmuth’s story is both interesting, and unique. He was actually drafted into the Nazi regime’s counterintelligence agency in 1939, even though he was a devout Christian. He used his position to save prisoners and hostages. However, he was caught warning someone who was in danger of arrest, and hanged in Plotzensee Prison in Berlin in 1945. Helmuth wrote over 1600 letters to his wife over the course of their relationship. The letter recorded in this book is incredibly moving.

Truly, this is a unique book, and one that I highly recommend. It is a book that brings so much humanity to those who we have so much respect for that have preceeded us in the faith.

I received this for free from Reformation Trust Publishing in exchange for this review. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission's 16 CFR, Part 255 : "Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.
Profile Image for Erica Lin.
128 reviews34 followers
June 23, 2026
”You are not one of God's agents to make me what l am, rather you are myself. You are my thirteenth chapter of the First Epistle to the Corinthians.”


This anthology spans the 1500s to the 1900s and compiles letters written between key Puritan and Reformed figures and their spouses. These couples set a precedence for what godly marriages look like and demonstrate a common theme: God is the ever-flowing source of goodness and mercy, faithfulness and patience, and we turn to Him in all things - in joy and in sadness.

As the author puts it, the historic view of marriage is that it “had an innate excellence, was vital for the development of Christian affection and friendship, and was one of God's major means for developing Christian character and spiritual maturity.”

These letters, due to the intimate nature of their form and content, disclose several elements of the Christian marriage so often hidden to the outsider - of battling distance and longing, mourning the sickness and death of a child or spouse, of grasping at unrequited love or failed proposals, and growing still in Christian character despite the hardships of living.

***

The letters that spoke most to me were those of Count Helmuth James Graf Moltke (1907-1945), a devout Christian who gave up his life saving prisoners and hostages after being drafted into an anti-Nazi counterintelligence agency. He was arrested on January 19, 1944 in his attempt to overthrow Hitler, and was tried in the People's Court by Roland Freisler (1893-1945). He was hanged in Plotzensee Prison in Berlin on January 23, 1945. Reading his letters to his wife meant I was - quite literally - reading his last words. I have included excerpts from his letters below:

”How good God has been to me! I must risk sounding hysterical, but I'm so filled with gratitude that there's really room for nothing else.”

“[God’s] guidance of me was so sure and clear
during those two days. Had the whole court been in uproar, had Herr Freisler and the surrounding walls tottered before my eyes, it would have made no difference to me. I felt exactly as it says in Isaiah, chapter 43, verse 2: "When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee: when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned; neither shall the flame kindle upon thee, ‘…that is to say upon thy soul.’”

“Yesterday, my dear, we read this beautiful passage: ‘But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us. We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed; we are perplexed but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed; always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life ofJesus might be made manifest in our body.’ Thanks be, my dear, before all things to God.”

“There is only one thing which I can say: if-You keep the consciousness of absolute sincerity when the Lord gives it to you - a security which you would never have known if it had not been for this time and its issue-then I shall leave behind me as my legacy a treasure which none can confiscate, against which even my life cannot weigh in the balance...”

“I stood before Freisler not as a Protestant, not as a great landowner, not as a noble, not as a Prussian, not as a German even... No, I stood there as a Christian and as nothing else...”

“I wept a little, not that I was sad, not that I was dispirited, not that I wanted to turn back-no, I wept forgratitude, because I was overwhelmed by this proof of the presence of God.”

“My dear, my life draws to its close, and I can truthfully
say of myself, ‘He died in the fullness of years and of life's experience.’”

“But I would end by saying toyou from the depths of my being and from the fullness of that treasure wherewith he hath filled this humble earthen vessel, ‘The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the holy
Ghost, be with you all evermore. Amen.’”


***

Having been thinking and praying a lot more about dating and marriage these days, I am reminded of both the beauty and purpose of marriage - and am so blessed to see in these letters some shining examples of what the Christian marriage should look like.

***

Other highlighted quotes:

THE BEAUTY OF MARRIAGE:

“It is a mercy to have a faithful friend, that loveth you
entirely, and is as true to you as yourself, to whom you may open your mind and communicate your affairs, and who would be ready to strengthen you, and divide the cares of your affairs and family with you, and help you to bear your burdens, and comfort you in your sorrows, and be the daily companion of your lives, and partaker of your joys and sorrows. And it is a mercy to have so near a friend to be a helper to your soul; to join with you in prayer and other holy exercises; to watch over you and tell you of your sins and dangers, and to stir up in you the grace of God, and remember to you of the life to come, and cheerfully accompany you in the ways of holiness.” (Richard Baxter, 1615-1691)

CHARACTERISTICS OF A GODLY SPOUSE:

“He governed by persuasion, which he never employed but to things honourable and profitable for herself; he loved her soul and her honour more than her outside.” Lucy Hutchinson)

“So constant was he in his love, that when she ceased to be young and lovely, he showed most fondness; he loved her at such a kind and generous rate as words cannot express.” (Lucy Hutchinson)

“It is a weighty business, but when put under the management of faith, prayer and prudence, it is a happy business.” (Thomas Charles, November 25, 1780)

“The sight of so much good sense, beauty and unaffected modesty, joined with that genuine piety which eminently adorns your person, administered fuel to the fire already enkindled, and which has continued burning with increasing ardour from that time to this.” (Thomas Charles, December 28, 1779)

ABOUNDING LOVE:

“And this fear was increased much by a consciousness
of the extreme tenderness my heart feels for you, which sometimes makes me dread lest I should sin you away, by giving you that place in my heart which ought to be sacred to God alone, next to whom I believe I am permitted to love you. Pray that I may rest there.” (Mercy Doddridge, November 7, 1742)

“As God hath loved his children here in dust and ashes, with a love superior to that which he bears to all his other creatures (a love so amazing and wonderful as to stagger our belief by its greatness!), in the same manner does one Christian love another. He loves him next to the Almighty.” (Thomas Charles, March 1, 1780)

“I love you more now than ever before, more and more every year of the five - that I love you as much as I ever loved any other, or ever could have learned to love.” (John Broadus, September 2, 1863)

“You are not one of God's agents to make me what l am, rather you are myself. You are my thirteenth chapter of the First Epistle to the Corinthians.” (Helmuth James Graf Moltke, January 11, 1945)

GOD AT THE CENTRE OF MARRIAGE:

“Yet even this, which was the highest love he or any man could have, was yet bounded by a superior, he loved her in the Lord as his fellow creature, not his idol, but in such a manner as showed that an affection, bounded in the just rules of duty, far exceeds every way all the irregular passions in the world. He loved God above her, and all the other dear pledges of his heart, and at his command and for his glory cheerfully resigned them.” (Lucy Hutchinson)

“Both for myself and you, I would always pray that God may be so much dearer to us than we are to each other that our souls in his love ‘delight themselves in fatness,’ and feel he is an all sufficient God. By this means we shall be most likely to continue together, and not provoke the stroke of separation by an idolatrous love to one another. By this means we shall love one another in God and for God; and be armed with the whole armour of God for all events.” (Henry Venn, April 5, 1759)

“No, there can be no happiness but in the enjoyment of the inexhaustible and overflowing source of all goodness and perfection. As we lost our happiness by separating ourselves from God, so the only way of regaining it is, by returning to him again: for he has promised to meet us in Christ and there (and nowhere else) to be forever reconciled to us.” (Thomas Charles, March 1, 1780)

“I trust my esteem will keep apace with the working of Providence, whatever that will be.” (Sally Jones, April 27, 1780)

FALLING IN LOVE:

“You are the only person that ever I saw (and the first I ever addressed on the subject), with whom I thought I could spend my life in happy union and felicity, and for whom I possessed that particular affection and esteem requisite for conjugal happiness; and you are the only temporal blessing I have for some time past asked with importunity of the Lord.” (Thomas Charles, December 28, 1779)

PASSIONS VS. CONVICTION:

“Passions are unsteady things: they are no sooner
excited but they subside again and cannot be depended upon, but what proceeds from conviction is likely to be lasting. Passions are blind and dangerous leaders, but when they faithfully follow conviction they preserve their proper place and are not amiss...” (Thomas Charles, November 18, 1780)

MARRIAGE OF MINISTERS:

“It always pleases me to hear that a minister is well married. There is something in domestic life that seems suited to improve our meetness forspeakingto ourpeople. The growing soul when doubled in wedlock, and multiplied in children, acquires a thousand new feelings and sensibilities of which the solitary bachelor is incapable, and these teach and dispose us to feel for others, and give us interest both in their pleasures and their pains. And this sympathizing temper is a happy talent for a minister to possess. It will give him a deeper place in the hearts of his people, than some more shining accomplishments.” (Thomas Charles, November 25, 1780)

TRUSTING GOD DESPITE HARDSHIP:

“Is she ill ? It is right. Is she very ill... dying? It is still right. Is she gone to join the heavenly choristers? It is all right, notwithstanding our repining... Repinings! No; we will not repine. It is best she should go. It is best for her; this we must allow. It is best for us; do we expect it? Oh what poor, ungrateful, shortsighted worms are we! Let us submit, my Sarah, till we come to heaven.” (Samuel Pearce, December 13, 1794)

THE PASSING OF A SPOUSE:

“I have been bereaved of the best companion of my life, of one who, had it been so ordered, would not only have been the willing sharer of my indigence, but even of my death.” (John Calvin, April 7, 1549)

“Adieu, brother, and very excellent friend. May the Lord
Jesus strengthen you by his Spirit; and may he support me also under this heavy affliction, which would certainly overcome me had not he, who raises up the prostrate, strengthens the weak, and refreshes the weary, stretched forth his hand from heaven to me. Salute all the brethren and your whole family.” (John Calvin, April 11, 1549)

“Let not excess of love and delight in the stream make us forget the fountain; he and all his excellencies came from God, and flowed back into their own spring: there let us seek them, thither let us hasten after him; there having found him, let us cease to bewail among the dead that which is risen, or rather immortal.” (Lucy Hutchinson to her children upon her husband’s passing)

“Still bleeds the deep, deep wound; and a return to Birmingham is a return to the most poignant feelings. I wish however to resign him to the hand that gave and that had an unquestionable right to take away. Be still then every tumultuous passion, and know that he who hath inflicted these repeated strokes is God: that God whom I desire to reverence under every painful dispensation, being persuaded that what I know not now, I shall know hereafter.” (Sarah Pearce, Juy 11, 1800)
Profile Image for Bobby James.
116 reviews6 followers
October 12, 2023
In compiling the letters of believing couples through history, the Haykins do a fantastic job of depicting the ordinary, nurturing, passionate, courageous and fun aspects of godly marriage. It’s encouraging to see how much marriage has changed in our modern world and also how much it remains the same. This is a quote from von Moltke to his wife before his execution by the Nazi regime, “You are not one of God's agents to make me what I am, rather you are myself. You are my thirteenth chapter of the First Epistle to the Corinthians. Without this chapter no human being is truly human. Without you I would have accepted love. . . But without you, my dear, I would not have "had" love. I should not think of saying that I love you; that would be quite false. Rather you are the one part of me, which would be lacking if I was alone.”
10 reviews
February 6, 2026
It was cool to get an inside window into the love and marital lives of Christians from a different time. While reading I wondered if the values and convictions put forward could also be timeless. I supposed that question is not answered, but lived.
Profile Image for Damian Mai.
25 reviews
July 2, 2023
A lovely and inspiring collection of Christian love letters, the ones from Luther were expectedly funny. Short and sweet!
Profile Image for Michael.
15 reviews1 follower
May 8, 2016
Quick, enjoyable read.
Profile Image for Chandler.
540 reviews
August 19, 2024
This is a very unique and intriguing primary source idea for a work in church history/Christian marriage. Haykin has compiled a number of letters from well known Christian married couples in the Reformed/Calvinistic theological tradition. Some of the more recent letters are very beautiful and like the kind of love letters we hear and think of today. But some of the earlier letters are as cold as ice and seem so passionless. It’s funny to think it was considered so romantic. Haykin also has an interesting introduction to the book on the low patristic perspectives on sex and romance in marriage. However, I think Haykin overstates things when he describes the Reformation/Puritan period as a “recovery of biblical marriage.” Many patristic figures such as Origen may have had low views of sex, but none of the sound or orthodox fathers would have forbade or condemned marriage, and Origen even defended marriage against false teaches that forbade it. This is an interesting and, I think, unfounded claim from Haykin. It’s especially surprising considering his work in patristic studies. Still, one sees in the selected letters models and examples of godly, loving, and romantic marriages between famous theologians and their wives. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in primary sources in church history or Christian perspectives on marriage.
Profile Image for Kyle.
45 reviews3 followers
June 7, 2023
This is a book every man should read. While we don't write letters as a main form of communication, the glimpse into the marriage of these Reformers and Puritan men to how they revered and cherished their wives by way of the goose feather and folio is something to beholden to in this day and age where secularism has destroyed dating, courting, and the covenant of marriage (in their respected concepts only). In spirit and for the true Christian these things need to be taken back. It's not weak to love a Godly woman and show it to her and everyone in ear shot. It's a lost art of manhood and it needs to be rediscovered and put into practice. Every man needs to be in touch with their feminine side (so long as this feminine side is sentient and has a name lol). This book shows we can turn the world upside down and set the set the societal norms of sin ablaze with the word of God as men like Luther and Calvin, while still being intimate, romantic, and best friends with your wife. I loved it. Do both, drag knuckles and grunt in the woods while also being a kind and loving husband to the woman you are blessed to lead.
Profile Image for Phil Cotnoir.
560 reviews14 followers
November 23, 2017
This is a great little book containing letters between various Christian leaders and their spouses. I am thankful for it knowing that otherwise I would almost certainly have never read these letters or seen this side of these men. At 100 pages, it is a very quick read and I found myself wanting to read more letters from each person.
I highly recommend it.
Profile Image for Chenny Mae.
16 reviews6 followers
August 3, 2023
This book let us see glimpses of the shared marital love of the men and woman of faith through letters.

The letters are inspiring and romantic.

And to highlight, I really love the introduction written by the author. It focuses on the varying perspective of marriage by men as well as the rediscovery of the real meaning of marriage.
52 reviews2 followers
August 15, 2017
Rich

Rich examples of love in Christian couples as expressed in various letters. I suspect we have lost the ability to express ourselves this way. For Christians examples of how to ground love to each other in the Lord.
Profile Image for Wilson.
123 reviews
July 25, 2022
Good stuff. I loved eves-dropping on reformer and Puritan love letters to better grasp their view of marriage. Edifying to see their first love above their own.
Profile Image for Siarra Arthaud.
26 reviews
July 13, 2024
This book is a short read, but full of encouragement as you read love letters from Christians from over centuries ago! The purest love written in the sweetest, most genuine words.
Profile Image for Mark Nenadov.
808 reviews44 followers
July 22, 2011
This is a great tour of some of the letters that various well-known Christian couples have written to each other.

The letters are intimate, warm, and also sometimes very casual and ordinary. They are well chosen and give a good view of this throughout church history and in different places and circumstances.

The book is not long, and yet it has some serious "weight" to it, there is a lot to be gleaned from these letters. I highly recommended it to anyone who is or will be involved in a Christian marriage.
Profile Image for christina.
112 reviews
August 29, 2010
This was a good introduction to the personal lives of some historic Christians I didn't really know (as well as some I did). The only down side was feeling like some of the selections were just enough to tease me. The best part, besides making some new "friends" I hope to meet Someday, was being challenged in my own thinking about the marriage relationship.
Profile Image for Daniel Cooksey.
394 reviews3 followers
November 4, 2011
I enjoyed this short book, even if some of the letters were obtuse to me. A good read for those interested in the private thoughts of some prominent believers of the last two centuries.
Profile Image for Matthew.
375 reviews1 follower
March 3, 2016
This short book serves its purpose in showing us the deep love these couples had for one another throughout Christian history.
Profile Image for Adam Thomas.
907 reviews12 followers
July 4, 2016
Overall, a short and inspiring read, although some of the letter selections seemed a bit odd, making something of a mixed bag.
Profile Image for M.J. Hancock.
Author 3 books12 followers
April 27, 2017
Good book to read together! Quite a variety of love letters.
Profile Image for Marianna Lugo.
5 reviews
February 1, 2018
It was an overall nice book. But, OMG THE LAST TWO LETTERS!!!!!!!!!! NO words!!!! The last chapter made it all worth it.
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