Allan Fitzgerald, once a Manhattan lawyer, has retreated from life. His wife has left him, as has his enthusiasm for his trade. He expects to pass the remainder of his days alone, reading cheap novels and falling asleep before the television, until an itinerant farm hand, a young woman looking for work who's hitched all the way from Kansas, wanders onto his porch on a breezy late-April day...
This book claims to be a christian writing. It is NOT!!! This could have been written without the sexual details, and would have been so much better. I was really liking the story....then the sex detail started and the store went downhill from there. How does the author think she can talk about (at the end) about the "challenge confronting the Christian author" when she did not write a christian story? Writings today do not have to have sex in them to catch the readers attention.
I don't know but there was just something about this book that appealed to me. Maybe it was the religious overtones of this book that was mixed in and kind of put the characters on the same page...not sure. I would have liked the story to unfold more...give more back ground in appropriate places so that you know why the heroine is so passionate about CPW or give a longer glimpse into their new life with their new family....the possibilities for this was what rolled my imagination on. But even without those things I got a message and like reading the story of these two lost characters who found one another.
Quick read. Christian mixed with erotica? Not sure how I view that, so 3 stars because it was entertaining for being a quick read and it was slightly impressive how the characters found eachother, loved, made a family.
I wouldn't call this erotica, it's more of a romance novella with erotic parts, but it fails to provide the most important aspect of erotica, which is excitement. The focus is on creating a home, not create heat and passion, so not a story I found inspirational.