Gabrielle Meyer
Autor/a de When the Day Comes
Sèrie
Obres de Gabrielle Meyer
Of Rags and Riches Romance Collection: Nine Stories of Poverty and Opulence During the Gilded Age (2017) — Autor — 42 exemplars
Under the Apple Tree 5 exemplars
Sunken Hopes 5 exemplars
Across the Ages (Timeless Book #4) 3 exemplars
Duel Threat 2 exemplars
Veiled Intentions 1 exemplars
The Baby Proposal 1 exemplars
Buried Secrets 1 exemplars
In Sleepy Hollow 1 exemplars
Obres associades
The Convenient Bride Collection: 9 Romances Grow from Marriage Partnerships Formed Out of Necessity (2015) — Col·laborador — 38 exemplars
Etiquetat
Coneixement comú
Encara no hi ha coneixement comú d'aquest autor. Pots ajudar.
Membres
Ressenyes
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Autors associats
Estadístiques
- Obres
- 33
- També de
- 2
- Membres
- 373
- Popularitat
- #64,664
- Valoració
- 4.5
- Ressenyes
- 72
- ISBN
- 68
Grace and Hope are identical twin sisters living in both 1692 in Salem during the witch trials, and in 1912 New York when aviation is taking off. ;) The sisters are opposites in personalities and interests. In 1912, Hope is a daredevil, and one of the few women pilots. Grace prefers solid ground, and is a newspaper reporter. In both timelines, she feels like she lives in Hope’s shadow. In 1692, the sisters are basically servants to their father, working very hard for very little in return. Their mother, they’re told, died shortly and mysteriously after their birth. Rumor has it she was hanged for being a witch. Both girls experience unrequited love in different timelines too. The end result of which, was fairly predictable from the start, but a fun ride nonetheless. There is a major plot twist though! I fancy myself able to spot most plot twists coming. I didn’t see this one. Well done, Gabrielle. Like I said in the beginning, I’ve loved this series! Like can’t put it down. It’s so creative and fresh, and the way she includes Godly values makes it believable. Whereas other Christian fiction time travel books don’t align well with the Bible. Given, there wasn’t a ton of talk about God and faith, but overall it upholds biblical values. The only criticism I can say is that I didn’t like Hope. She was quite selfish. Like all the time thinking of herself only and first. All characters undergo some transformation, as does Hope. But she was pretty awful. Which perhaps was the author’s intent—Hope represents hope for change/something better. And Grace deals with Hope very patient and gracefully, even when Hope doesn’t deserve it. Their names are reflective of who they are.
Thank you Library Thing’s Early Reviewer Program and Bethany House Publishers for the early copy! All reviews and opinions are my own.
… (més)