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The Lady with the Dark Hair by Erin Bartels

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  Esther Markstrom has banked her whole life on her familial ties to the great artist Francisco Vella. What will she do if that is lost? How will she respond to a change in identity? Can she believe that she is still somebody with value even if what she has believed her whole life isn't actually the truth? Viviana Torrens has been orphaned and left without family. She has run for her life, changed her identity multiple times and simply wants a place to belong where she can be who she really is. She just wants to paint and to be recognized as having something of value even as a female artist in a time in history where women artists were not recognized or appreciated. Both ladies are caught in an identity crisis. What will they do? I'll leave you to read the book, though that question isn't completely answered in the book for either lady. But the journey that they both go through is in the book and you, as the reader, can search for yourself what you would do in their situati

A Winter by the Sea by Juli Klassen

 Four sisters, Sarah, Emily, Viola, and Georgiana, along with their mother make up the main characters in this second book in the series "On Devonshire Shores". In the last book, Viola has married, but lives next door. Sarah is the responsible one determined to make their guest house a success; Emily wants nothing more than to publish a book and marry her childhood sweetheart, and Georgiana just wants to enjoy life to the fullest.  The story is told in a back-and-forth manner between Emily and Sarah and I just really enjoyed it. It's historical fiction in the fact that the Duke of Kent truly did winter in Sidmouth, but the rest I will not mention since it gives away a little too much of the story if you don't know the history.  These sisters are so likeable you just want to root for them, you just want them to succeed. They are struggling to make their guesthouse a success so they can survive and yet they are more than willing to give to help those poorer than then, e

The Wind Blows in Sleeping Grass by Katie Powner

 I feel like I have been blessed to make the discovery of some really good Christian authors in the last few years and Katie Powner is definitely one of those delightful finds. I have read some really good books by her and would recommend anything she writes, at least so far.  The Wind Blows in Sleeping Grass features a middle-aged man, I would guess, a foster kid, who made some bad choices, but now wants to do what's right; his sister and her son; an old lady with serious regrets; and a younger lady who seems skittish. and a few more fun characters. Throw all those characters together and you get a story that is sad and redemptive, hopeful and healing.  Pete drives a garbage truck and doesn't see much beyond that for his future, just him and his pot-bellied pig, but then so much more happens to him and he is able to find hope and joy again. I am not going to say much more, but just read the book.  Warning: there is some domestic abuse talked about in here--it's not descrip