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Refuge for the Archaeologist by Danielle Grandinetti Review

Chewie highly recommends this exciting book!!

About the Book

Title: Refuge for the Archaeologist

Author: Danielle Grandinetti

Series: Harbored in Crow’s Nest, Bk II

Genre: Historical Romantic Suspense, Inspirational

Releases: July 18, 2023

Will uncovering the truth set them free or destroy what they hold most dear?

Wisconsin, 1930—With her health in shambles and her archaeological career on the line, Cora Davis retreats to Crow’s Nest and the home of her great aunt to heal. She doesn’t think much of the missing memories from between the earthquake that caused her dizzy spells and her trip home. Until she begins remembering the danger that sent her fleeing her last dig and the person responsible.

After a decade as a ranch hand, Silas Ward returned to Crow’s Nest to provide for the women in his life. That same protective instinct propels him to Cora’s aid. But when finances dwindle, the lies and greed of others threaten to ruin his family. Unless Silas can walk the thin line of compromise. A choice that might cost him Cora’s affection.



As winter’s chill threatens, will Crow’s Nest prove a refuge, or will both Cora and Silas have no choice but to sacrifice their chance at happiness to save those they love?

Get your book at link below!!

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1956098100

About the Author

Danielle Grandinetti writes both historical romantic suspense and contemporary sweet romance. She is an avid reader and her writing has won the University of Northwestern Distinguished Faith in Writing Award. Originally from the Chicagoland area, she now lives along Lake Michigan’s Wisconsin shoreline with her husband and their two young sons. Find her online at daniellegrandinetti.com.

My Impressions

“Digging in holes, looking for someone’s story was her life. But this time, she was searching for her own story.”

I always look forward to Danielle Grandinetti’s next book. Book II in the Harbored in Crow’s Nest series, Refuge for the Archaeologist, is so fantastic! It is helpful to have read book I, Confessions to a Stranger, first.

In 1930, a time when men dominated the archaeology field, Cora Davis enjoys her position as an archaeologist in the Middle East. Then an accident and amnesia bring her home to Crow’s Nest, Wisconsin. She doesn’t remember, but someone does… and danger lurks, threatening not only Cora, but anyone close to her.

Silas Ward is a young, former ranch hand who has left his dreams in the West and returned home to care for his family. He can’t fathom a young lady not wanting to be domesticated and settle down with a family or protect what people she has. How can these two work together to protect their loved ones and themselves from an unknown evil? Can they put aside their assumptions of each other and get to know each other? Or will their bickering keep them off balance and unwilling to see another view?

Cora is itching to recover her memory, her balance, and her former life. That means leaving Wisconsin, any friends or relatives, and returning to the dig. Silas challenges Cora’s concern for things over people. “They aren’t just things.“ The muscle along Cora’s jaw clenched. “They are part of our world’s history. Stories of people who lived centuries or millennia ago. Stories of real people. People who have voices that need to be heard. Finding what they left behind helps me tell their story. Gives them back their voice.”

Besides thoughts of Cora running rampant in his mind, Silas has deep problems in his household. On the verge of losing everything he’s fought to protect, he doubts that he can be the provider in every way that he wants to be. “But am I enough?”

“God is enough.” Cora encourages him. I enjoyed seeing how these two built each other up in the faith at crucial times, learning to really listen to each other, and be present for each other. “Eloquence isn’t as important as presence…especially for someone who has a hole in her heart from a missing loved one.” This quote touches my life where I’m at.

I highly recommend this book to history and archaeology lovers, plus Indiana Jones fans. I was gifted a copy from the author, plus I bought an ecopy and a pb for my keeper shelf. No positive review was required, and all opinions are my own.

Notable Quotables:

“Staying away means remembering life as it was, not how it is.”

“I guess that’s why you don’t approve of me. You sacrificed everything to take care of your family and think I should have done the same.”

“And you’re a treasure worth more than the rarest artifact.”

“He bowed his head, tried to pray, but he didn’t trust God to answer in the way he wanted Him to.”

My Rating

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Magnificent!! Ready for the next book!! And I’m pretty sure Buck has a story somewhere!!

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Corner Booth by Chautona Havig Review and Giveaway

About the Book

Book: Corner Booth

Author: Chautona Havig

Genre: Contemporary Christian Romance

Release date: March 17, 2015

Corner Booth Cover

A daring move forges the love of a lifetime

A rushed lunch and a bold move introduce Carlie to a stranger—one who hardly acknowledges her existence as he sits across from her, sharing his booth to save her a wait in a long line.
What began as a random encounter becomes a weekly date in which Carlie chatters about her life to a silent lunchmate. Much about him interests her–his slightly Euro fashion sense, his commitment to the work he does as he eats his lunch week after week, and his evident attention to the running monologue she shares between bites of meals that he inevitably pays for.
Dean gets to know the woman across from him–looks forward to their lunches each week, learns valuable lessons about himself—but when the cafe is threatened, and then when she doesn’t show up one day, he suspects their unusual friendship means more to him than he imagined.

Settle into the booth with Carlie and Dean and learn just how eloquent silence really is.

Click here to get your copy!

My Impressions

“Every time you slip, just once, your mouth becomes a cesspool of linguistic garbage.”

Chautona Havig likes to set up unique premises for novels she then tackles as a challenge to turn into an interesting, faith-filled, and believable storyline. Yet, Corner Booth may be one of the most unusual ideas yet. Based on the Bible verse found in James 1:19, “…You must all be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to get angry,” Havig builds her romance around a young, verbose, theology professor and a beautiful retail clerk who has no true self-concept. Weekly lunch dates consists of the talkative prof being refusing to talk to his pretty lunch date, only listen, as she pours out details of her heart. I love the growth we see in both characters, Dean and Carlie, by the end of the book, but oy, the pain of getting there!!

My fave character is often a supporting character who contributes to the necessary changes in one of the main characters, and without whom the story would be incomplete. Larry is the winner of that category in this book. He is a keen observer, actually of both Dean and Carlie, he has great insight, patience, tact, and loves others despite knowing their flaws. Plus he speaks the truth in love.

I would encourage you to see how Ms. Havig can turn a book with such an unusual premise into a real-life, believable, truth-filled novel you’ll long remember! Oh, yes, if you like to laugh out loud and read witticisms, those are bonus givens in Havig’s works!!

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I received a copy of the book from the author and Celebrate Lit, plus I bought my own. No positive review was required, and all opinions are my own.

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Notable Quotables:

“They can’t seem to comprehend why it’s important to base their beliefs on Scripture over conventional wisdom.”

“…the only thing separating jock from jerk is a vowel.”

“While feelings are real, they do not always reflect truth.”

My Rating

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

About the Author

USA Today Bestselling author of Aggie and Past Forward series, Chautona Havig lives in an oxymoron, escapes into imaginary worlds that look startlingly similar to ours and writes the stories that emerge. An irrepressible optimist, Chautona sees everything through a kaleidoscope of It’s a Wonderful Life sprinkled with fairy tales. Find her at chautona.com and say howdy—if you can remember how to spell her name.

More from Chautona

You know, originally, I had Dean as a guy who was too wrapped up in his own little world to care about anyone else—the stereotypical academic. I pictured him buried deep in original Biblical manuscripts, annoyed that anyone would dare to invade his study time.

But you know what? That’s the easycharacter.

When I went back to edit the book, I had this thought. What if Dean weren’t reclusive at all? What if he were kind of a know-it-all who couldn’t keep his thoughts to himself. Maybe a child prodigy who was used to people thinking him rather brilliant and looking for his insights.

Yeah… I could get into that.

There was just one small problem. I’d written the entire book without him talking much at all on those Wednesdays. Now what?

After much deliberation, even more prayer, and a bit of fudging, I came up with the solution. What if he just challenged himself for “one lunch?” Just one hour or so of not talking to prove to himself (and his peers) that he could do it.

How could he possibly know he’d set things up for months of wordless lunches—on his part? And what would a person learn in a situation like that?

I’ve never admitted this before, but I tested it a bit. At situations where I could, I forced myself to listen to people’s stories, their questions, their opinions. The hard part was not spending my listening time formulating my response (how rude anyway!). I really had to focus on exactly what they said, how their voice altered based on their emotions, and what others around us had to say to encourage (or not—too often not, I’ll admit).

I learned a lot with the experiment, and I’ll be honest. I still catch myself listening with an ear to how I’ll respond instead of really listening. No, I don’t expect to find some café romance for myself. My guy is amazing, and he’s probably the only person on the planet who could put up with me, so… I think I’ll keep him. But I do expect to keep learning how to really hear people. You know… kind of like Jesus did. Imagine that.

Blog Stops

Pause for Tales, May 9

Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, May 9

Babbling Becky L’s Book Impressions, May 10

Lots of Helpers, May 11

Miriam Jacob, May 11

Texas Book-aholic, May 12

By the Book, May 13

Inklings and notions, May 14

Spoken from the Heart, May 15

For Him and My Family, May 15

Abba’s Prayer Warrior Princess, May 16

deb’s Book Review, May 17

Locks, Hooks and Books, May 18

Mary Hake, May 18

Ashley’s Clean Book Reviews, May 19

Because I said so — and other adventures in Parenting, May 20

Blogging With Carol, May 21

A Good Book and Cup of Tea, May 21

Simple Harvest Reads, May 22 (Guest Review from Donna Cline)

Giveaway

To celebrate her tour, Chautona is giving away the grand prize package of a $25 Amazon gift card and a paperback copy of the book!!

Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.

https://promosimple.com/ps/1d735/corner-booth-celebration-tour-giveaway