Where the road bends : a novel / Rachel Fordham.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781638083825
- ISBN: 1638083827
- Physical Description: 375 pages (large print) ; 23 cm
- Edition: Center Point Large Print edition.
- Publisher: Thorndike, Maine : Center Point Large Print, 2022.
Content descriptions
General Note: | Regular print version previously published by Revell. Includes discussion questions. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Large type books. Women landowners > Fiction. Convalescence > Fiction. Man-woman relationships > Fiction. Iowa > Fiction. |
Genre: | Christian fiction. Inspirational fiction. |
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
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BookList Review
Where the Road Bends
Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
After losing her parents and her reputation, Norah King would do anything to save her land, even if it meant a loveless marriage promising financial relief. After she finds handsome Quincy Barnes, a tormented, bankrupt, and now nearly dead prize fighter, on her property, they bond during his days of recovery. But Norah's dream of keeping her land prevents their mutual spark from becoming something more. Two years later, Quincy's success as a businessman is owed to a secret he kept from Norah. He is determined to make amends, but when he returns, it is Norah who needs rescuing and the freedom that can only be found in truth. Returning to the Iowa heartland in this 1882 inspirational romance about second chances and self-worth, Fordham again sparkles as an adept storyteller, from a thrilling hook on to the ache of deferred desire, years of regret, and, finally, the experience of redemption grounded in honesty and acceptance. Where the Road Bends celebrates the victory of facing one's imperfections with grace and extending that empathy to others as a meaningful legacy.
Publishers Weekly Review
Where the Road Bends
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
In this sweet romance from Fordham (A Lady in Attendance), a young woman falls in love with a down-and-out stranger in 1880s small-town Iowa. Norah King has strived to maintain her family's farm after her father's death a year ago, but his gambling habit left her with few friends, and the bank's threats to call in her father's loan test her optimism. When Jake Granger, a middle-aged farmer 20 years Norah's senior, offers to marry her and take on her debt, she says yes. Days before the wedding, Norah discovers a severely injured man on her farm and takes him in. She helps the man, Quincy, recover from wounds sustained after being roughed up for throwing a boxing match and instills in him the transformative power of God. The two bond, but Quincy, destitute and aimless, feels she's better off with Jake and hits the road. Two years later, Quincy has opened a successful hotel and decides to reunite with Norah, unaware of the dire consequences that aiding him has wrought on her life. Norah and Quincy's Dickensian reversal of fortune lends the story a satisfying narrative symmetry, and the resolution's testament to the healing power of Christian forgiveness might inspire a tear or two. The strong central couple make this a road worth travelling. (June)