Strong-willed Amnesty Brown leaves Boston to claim an inheritance in the Sierra Nevada mountains and finds herself the owner and new editor of the town newspaper, and falling in love with saloon owner Haydn Lomax
New York Times bestselling author Francine Rivers continues to win both industry acclaim and reader loyalty around the globe. Her numerous bestsellers include Redeeming Love, A Voice in the Wind, and Bridge to Haven, and her work has been translated into more than thirty different languages. She is a member of Romance Writers of America's coveted Hall of Fame as well as a recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award from American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW).
This is one of the books I can read again and again. I've read it the first time when I was a child and it has followed me all the way till present day. I just love it :)
“Shaft has a town full of men upholding the law…When anything happens anywhere, the owner of wherever takes care of whatever happens.” But “Arrogance and bad manners have never gotten anyone anywhere…Unless you’re a man, and then you might just become President.” Enter Amnesty Elizabeth Brown, “fresh, beautiful, clean, intelligent, determined, virginal, vulnerable, desirable and damn well deserving of far better than…this sordid environment.”
“There is nothing more treacherous in this world than a good woman and this one has all the markings of one… ‘You’re a very dangerous woman, Amnesty Elizabeth Brown…Because you dogmatically choose to see things the way they could be, rather than accepting the way things really are’…The real danger didn’t lie in her willful bullheadedness, but in her absolute sincerity and resolve. She believed in what she was doing…She meant her motto: Neutrality in nothing.” And she’s resolved to rise up and roar back through reclaiming her late uncle’s newspaper.
“She’s got a tongue sharp enough to castrate a grizzly bear at fifty paces!” He’s got a remarkable flair for good whiskey and bad women with reputations muddied beyond redemption, but her competition Haydn Lomax isn’t the only man in town vying for mayorship and marriage. “Amnesty decided that between Hadyn Lomax’s offer for the press and Thomas Colter’s more casual offer for the mine, she had a great deal to consider over the next few weeks.”
“This is the death of Miss Amnesty Elizabeth Brown…the birth of a married lady” and the resurrection of a nineteenth century mining community. Francine Rivers’ A Fire in the Heart is incendiary.