Loving the Dog Groomer by Cindy Ervin Huff

Reviewed by Sandra Merville Hart

Dog Groomer Bria Willis doesn’t trust men. The former model has plenty of reasons to maintain her distance from Marc Graham but it’s her job to train new owners to care for their dogs. Aaron, her brother and co-owner of their dog grooming business, will be near if Marc crosses a line.

After the death of his estranged wife, Marc’s priority is helping his son Tyler recover from her death. He’d been in the same car accident that killed his mother and his counselor suggested getting a dog to help Tyler. Having Brownie around has helped his son, but the pet didn’t obey Marc. He needed Bria’s help.

Believable characters recovering from lingering wounds from past relationships put up obstacles and even threaten their friendship.

I enjoyed this contemporary romance intertwined with plenty of doggie challenges to make pet lovers swoon! Tyler tugged at my heart as much as Bria and Marc. The story moves quickly.

Plenty of cute doggie moments and challenges to thrill pet lovers!

I was given a copy of the book by the author. A review was not required. The thoughts expressed are my own.

How to (Almost) Ruin Your Summer by Taryn Souders

Reviewed by Sandra Merville Hart

Camp can make you crazy

Chloe McCorkle doesn’t want to go to summer camp but has no choice. Her parents are going on a cruise and Chloe needs someplace to go. Chloe just wants to make enough money during the summer to buy a new bike to ride to school in the fall. She dreams up a scheme contingent on taking the baking course at camp.

She immediately meets a new friend, Pogo, and is happy to see a couple of school friends at camp. One of them is her secret crush.

Victoria, one of the girls in Chloe’s cabin, is constantly getting her in trouble.

Add to the that a very troublesome goat and you’ve got the makings for a fun novel geared to children 9 – 13.

Definitely recommend this chapter book for children!

Amazon

Try Some Amish Style Pie

Welcome to writer Julie Dearyan, who is here to share a pie recipe with us. Welcome to Historical Nibbles, Julie!

By Julie Dearyan
 
Pie is the quintessential, special occasion (or any occasion) dessert in rural Ohio. We love every kind of pie. Since we live in Amish country, we are the lucky recipients of Amish baking prowess.

At an Amish style banquet, a triangular shaped piece is parked at each plate topped with real (no skimping here) whipped cream. A variety of luscious fillings peek from beneath their cloudlike blankets. Peanut butter (always a winner), coconut (yum!), blueberry (more of a jelly filling than the ones my mom made growing up), raspberry, strawberry, blackberry, black raspberry, and more. The golden, flaky crust provides the perfect crunch.

Early on, some smart Ohioans showed us a rite of passage when entering an Amish restaurant or banquet. Check out the pieces of pies at each place first. Decide if you like that kind or quickly swap it out before the next diner comes. Neal and I are extremely grateful to those teachers. I always go for coconut or peanut butter. Down below, I share a recipe for Amish style peanut butter cream pie that I think you’ll enjoy. Your guests will love it too.

Amish Peanut Butter Pie
Adapted from https://www.thebakingchocolatess.com/amish-peanut-butter-cream-pie/
 
1 pie crust 9-inch, baked and cooled or make your own crust. Marty (the best cook I know) tells me there is no shame in buying a Pillsbury pie crust. Since she is the best cook I know, I agree with her.
Peanut Butter Crumbles
·       ½ cup powdered sugar
·       ¼ cup creamy peanut butter
Peanut Butter Filling
·       1 3.4 ounce box of instant Jell-O vanilla pudding mix 
·       1 ½ cups milk
·       ½ cup peanut butter
·       1 cup whipped cream 
Whipped Topping On Top of Pie
·       2 cups whipped cream Using mixer, whip together on medium-high 1 cup of whipping cream and 3 tablespoons of powdered sugar to get whipped cream texture. 1 cup of whipping cream makes 2 cups when whipped.
Using an electric mixer, in a medium bowl, add powdered sugar and peanut butter. Mix on medium speed until small peanut butter crumbles start to come together. If mixture is too powdery, simply add a few drops of water to the and larger nuggets will form. Add half the peanut butter nuggets to the bottom of the pie shell.
Using a mixer, mix together the dry vanilla instant pudding mix, milk and peanut butter together for 2 minutes. Add in the whipped cream (make sure it’s already whipped) and mix in lightly. Pour pudding into pie crust on top of the peanut butter crumbles.
Top with whipped cream. Add the remaining peanut butter crumbles to the top of the whipped cream. Let the pie cool in the refrigerator for at least 1-2 hours to set up before cutting.

In Feast or Famine by Mesu Andrews

Reviewed by Sandra Merville Hart

The Egyptian Chronicles, Book 2

This is the story of Joseph just before his release from prison—for a crime he didn’t commit—and up through the famine.

It’s a beautifully written story told in multiple viewpoints. The author’s attention to historical detail and tradition amazed me. I’ve read the Biblical account that is the background for this story many times and the historical and cultural insights brought me a whole new perspective.

Those familiar sections of Joseph’s Biblical story were the parts that gripped me most in this novel. Characters are well-developed and believably true to the times. The setting is a turbulent period in history that moves quickly. Well done!

Recommended for readers of Biblical fiction!

Amazon

The Thousand Islands

by Susan G Mathis

Welcome Susan G. Mathis, fellow author at Wild Heart Books, back to Historical Nibbles! Susan shares some historical background for her latest release, A Summer at Thousand Island House. Welcome back, Susan!

More than 1800 islands, known as The Thousand Islands, lay between New York state and Ontario, Canada, where Lake Ontario narrows and becomes the St. Lawrence River. Here the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River intersect to become the world’s largest inland navigation system. Huge freighters pass by tiny islands along the main channel and share the waterway with all kinds of boats including kayaks and canoes!

In 1872, George M. Pullman invited President Ulysses S. Grant to visit his small island during the reelection campaign, as well as several Civil War heroes including General Sheridan. When President Grant and his entourage came, the Thousand Islands became a national event. The press touted the Thousand Islands as THE place to summer for the rich and famous and common man alike.

In so doing—and thanks to excited journalists—he launched The Thousand Islands Gilded Age season of the rich and famous buying islands and lots along the mainland and building castles, mansions, and magnificent summer homes. Those islands, those homes have delightful, intriguing, and often poignant stories to tell. And I aim to tell a lot of those stories, including Katelyn’s Choice that tells the Pullman Island story and now, ten other stories including my latest, A Summer at Thousand Island House.

From 1872 until 1914 the Thousand Islands Gilded Age brought tens of thousands of visitors to the enchanting summer resort. Grand hotels popped up. The rich scooped up islands and built fancy mansions and castles they called cottages and hunting lodges. The middle class bought small parcels of land along the mainland and built simple cottages.

And tourism took off.

The railroad expanded to bring in tourists and landowners. Large side-paddle steamboats toured passengers around the islands, and distinguished visitors made it the summer resort to visit. They came from New York City, Chicago, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and many other places.

Several of the amazing castles and beautiful summer homes you can still tour today including Boldt Castle and “The Towers” on Dark Island (now called Singer Castle) which is the setting for Devyn’s Dilemma, and many others.

About A Summer at Thousand Island House

By Susan G Mathis

She came to work with the children, not fall in love.

Part-nanny, part entertainer, Addison Bell has always had an enduring love for children. So what better way to spend her creative energy than to spend the summer nannying at the renowned Thousand Island House on Staple’s Island? As Addi thrives in her work, she attracts the attention of the recreation pavilion’s manager, Liam Donovan, as well as the handsome Navy Officer Lt. Worthington, a lighthouse inspector, hotel patron, and single father of mischievous little Jimmy.

But when Jimmy goes missing, Addi finds both her job and her reputation in danger. How can she calm the churning waters of Liam, Lt. Worthington, and the President, clear her name, and avoid becoming the scorn of the Thousand Islands community?

ABOUT SUSAN:

Susan G Mathis is an international award-winning, multi-published author of stories set in the beautiful Thousand Islands, her childhood stomping ground in upstate NY. Susan has been published more than twenty-five times in full-length novels, novellas, and non-fiction books. She has ten in her fiction line including, The Fabric of Hope, Christmas Charity, Katelyn’s Choice, Devyn’s Dilemma, Peyton’s Promise, Sara’s Surprise, Reagan’s Reward, Colleen’s Confession, Rachel’s Reunion, Mary’s Moment andA Summer at Thousand Island House. Her book awards include two Illumination Book Awards, three American Fiction Awards, two Indie Excellence Book Awards, and four Literary Titan Book Awards. Reagan’s Reward is a Selah Awards finalist. Susan is also a published author of two premarital books, two children’s picture books, stories in a dozen compilations, and hundreds of published articles. Susan makes her home in Colorado Springs and enjoys traveling around the world but returns each summer to enjoy the Thousand Islands. Visit www.SusanGMathis.com/fiction for more.

Buy links: Amazon | Barnes&Nobles | Wild Heart Books

Freedom’s Price by Pegg Thomas

Reviewed by Sandra Merville Hart

Path to Freedom, Book 1

By 1798, Gwen Morgan has been an indentured servant for two years, with five more years until she earns her freedom. She’s a maid to a businessman’s spoiled daughter, who becomes pregnant with a ship captain’s child while courting a rich aristocrat.

Gwen had been sold to a different family than her sister when the orphans arrived in America. Gwen’s greatest desire is to find her sister.

Thomas and Betsy Baldwin can’t abide in New Bern any longer. Laws now prevent the Quakers from buying slaves to grant their freedom. They make preparations to go western territory around the Ohio River where slavery is prohibited.

When Gwen is given a chance for freedom in exchange for an oath, she jumps at the chance. Maybe she can finally find her sister. She doesn’t plan on falling in love with Micah.

But the oath comes with high price when an enemy from the past threatens her new life.

My attention was riveted from the first chapter. Likeable characters deal with believable problems from the beginning. The mother and her baby tugged at my heart. The grandparents who quickly accept them both into their home made me love them.

I enjoyed this poignant story that held many surprising twists. Not everything was completely resolved in this first book in the series, leaving me to wonder what happens in the next book. The ending is both exciting and satisfying.

Faith is a strong component in this story. The author blends that easily a part of the plot. This book was a page-turner for me!

Recommended for readers of inspirational historical romances!

I was given a copy of the book by the author. A positive review was not required. The opinions expressed are my own.

Amazon

Knock-Knock Jokes for Kids by Rob Elliott

Reviewed by Sandra Merville Hart

My young grandchildren love for us to tell them knock-knock jokes. We remembered a few but then drew a blank.

So when I found this delightful joke book geared to children 6 – 9, I snatched it up. The children have enjoyed it as much as I’d hoped. In fact, the seven-year-old reads them to us!

I recommend this fun book for children 5 – 9.

Amazon

Hoping for Treasure by Bettie Boswell

Reviewed by Sandra Merville Hart

A Sequel to On Cue

Current Day—Ginny discovers a hidden compartment in an old desk soon after her marriage to Scott. The ancient typewriter and some manuscripts inside snagged my interest immediately.

In 1946—A WWII soldier boards in the boarding house where Betsy lives and works. She likes Dale but his family owns a farm. No way is she returning to the farm life that was her childhood. Yet she secretly is attracted to him.

There’s also a Civil War element to this story. That’s not part of the time slip element yet is still a thread in the story.

I enjoyed this time slip story. The author weaves a multi-layered tale that binds the present to the past through a beautiful historic home. Each era holds its own tragedy. Realistic, lovable characters snagged my interest from the first chapter and held on.

Recommended for readers of historical romance, time slip, and nostalgia.

Amazon

Our God is Bigger Than That by Michelle Medlock Adams and Eva Marie Everson

Reviewed by Sandra Merville Hart

I love this sweet story!

Different animals on the farm have real fears and their mamas remind them that God is bigger than all their fears.

A little girl is frightened of the dark and her father reminds her that God is bigger than all her fears.

A great book to read to young children at bedtime!

The book is geared toward children 2 – 8.

Amazon

Female Telegraph Operators Create a New Genre

by Sandra Merville Hart

It was fun to invite readers on this book’s journey with an aspiring writer and a female telegraph operator!

To those who lived in the 1880s, venturing into the newly-settled and largely-unsettled West had become much safer—though not without danger—with the system of railroads already in place. I enjoyed taking readers to Chicago, Omaha, Oakland, Ogden, and Sacramento, as well as frontier towns along the journey such as Cheyenne.

Our heroine is a telegraph operator. She temporarily leaves her job to escort a little girl to her ailing mother in San Francisco.

My research about telegraph jobs taught me quite a bit of terminology.

For example, a clatter arises when another operator “calls.” The call begins with something like “B m—X n”, which means the B m is the station receiving the call and X n is the caller.

B m must signal a reply that she’s ready to receive the call.

The Sounder receives sounds of the alphabet in dots and dashes. Some operators sent messages too rapidly to understand. When this occurs, the receiving operating asks for it again with a Break (she opens her “key” to break the circuit) and interrupts with “Please repeat.”

“G.A. the—” means “Go ahead” and “the” was the last word she understood.

Operators end every message with his/her own private “call” as well as the office’s call and “O.K.” at the end of each message.

Wired Love, which was written by telegraph operator Ella Cheever Thayer in 1879, provided many insights about the job’s daily tasks.

One of them was the lack of privacy on the lines. She can hear the messages sent to other wires but only offices on the same wire. In Wired Love, operators heard messages sent to and from twenty offices.

By the way, the public grew so fascinated with the role of women in telegraphy that it became the topic of romance novels and short stories, creating a new genre called “telegraphic romance” in the latter 1800s. That’s a little-known fun fact for you!

I enjoyed writing this series. I invite you to read the whole “Second Chances” series beginning with A Not So Convenient Marriage, Book 1, A Not So Persistent Suitor, Book 2, and A Not So Peaceful Journey, Book 3.