One of Pamela Morsi's best!
Sweet love story.
Sweet love story about a moonshiner and preacher's daughter.
Pamela Morsi never disappoints me with her books, I'm always drawn in by the characters and how their minds works and of course their love story. Hannah and Henry Lee Watson are fun to read about because they each have a secret yet their concern for one another is very tender. I loved the book...it's a keeper; and I know I will read it again and enjoy it as much as the first time!
This is Pamela Morsi's first published work. This story teems with hallmarks of Pamela Morsi's books: small towns, strong heroines and memorable characters.
At 26, Hannah wants a husband and family of her own. However, she spent (from her mid-teens on) caring for her minister-father and his home. Now, that her father has remarried, Hannah thinks it is time to concentrate on her own life. To that end, she tries to trick an unmarried man into marrying her. Hannah does not get exactly what she was expecting.
I thought the story was realistic but did not like the 'big misunderstanding' that keeps them apart. I also found it unrealistic that she did not know that Watson was a Whiskey Man. Otherwise, the story was charming and interesting.
At 26, Hannah wants a husband and family of her own. However, she spent (from her mid-teens on) caring for her minister-father and his home. Now, that her father has remarried, Hannah thinks it is time to concentrate on her own life. To that end, she tries to trick an unmarried man into marrying her. Hannah does not get exactly what she was expecting.
I thought the story was realistic but did not like the 'big misunderstanding' that keeps them apart. I also found it unrealistic that she did not know that Watson was a Whiskey Man. Otherwise, the story was charming and interesting.