04 July 2022

Where the Road Bends

 

RACHEL FORDHAM

Stats for my copy: Trade paperback, published 2022 by Revell.

How acquired: From Revell Reads Blogger Program.

First line: The small band on her ring finger glistened in the sunlight as Norah King walked the family land she had nearly lost.

(Goodreads synopsis below.)

My thoughts: I’ve read all but one of Ms. Fordham’s books as they were published. Her first book, THE HOPE OF AZURE SPRINGS, remained my favorite. Until now. I believe WHERE THE ROAD BENDS is my new favorite.

Quincy and Norah are both lost souls, though Quincy much more so. Norah has been struggling to hold onto the family land since her father passed away, and in a last ditch effort to keep the bank from taking it, she is engaged to marry a man she doesn’t love but who has promised to work her land and get the farm back into shape. With no living family, the land Norah grew up on represents home and stability for her, and she is desperate not to lose it.

Quincy has been on his own since he was a young teen, barely supporting himself as a back alley street fighter. Their paths cross when Norah finds him on her farm, beaten and unconscious, and drags him to her home where she nurses him back to health and encourages him to make a better life for himself.

Two years later, Norah’s and Quincy’s lives have both changed dramatically. While neither knows the fate of the other, neither has ever forgotten the other. But Quincy has been carrying around guilt over a secret he kept from Norah, and he sets out to find her again and make things right.

I loved Quincy so much, but at the same time I had mixed feelings about that secret of his and what he did. But he has a good heart, and even the best of us are flawed, and he wanted to set things straight. I also loved Norah. Strong and independent, but living in a time when those values were not traditionally valued in a woman, and circumstances could be hard to rise above. Ms. Fordham’s writing just flows across the page, and even the supporting characters are individual and well written.

A beautifully written story of redemption, of finding one’s place, of letting go of the past and making a better future.

*I received a free copy of this book from the publisher and have voluntarily reviewed it*

Synopsis from Goodreads: As Norah King surveys her family land in Iowa in 1880, she is acutely aware that it is all she has left, and she will do everything in her power to save it--even if that means marrying a man she hardly knows. Days before her wedding, Norah discovers an injured man on her property. Her sense of duty compels her to take him in and nurse him back to health. Little does she realize just how much this act of kindness will complicate her life and threaten the future she's planned.

Norah's care does more than aid Quincy Barnes's recovery--it awakens his heart to possibilities. Penniless and homeless, he knows the most honorable thing he can do is head on down the road and leave Norah to marry her intended. But walking away from the first person to believe in him proves much harder than he imagined. 

Rachel Fordham invites you to experience the strength and beauty of love forged in the crucible of hardship in this heartwarming story.

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