
Items in order will be sent via Express post as soon as they arrive in the warehouse. Order may come in multiple shipments, however you will only be charged a flat fee.Ģ-10 days after all items have arrived in the warehouse Overall a really sweet book about second chances, lost love, and recovery.Items in order will be sent as soon as they arrive in the warehouse. I loved how this book included memories of how the two fell for each other in high school and a few flashbacks (although those flashbacks were in third person which threw me off at first). And this book had Jude’s chapters start with his cravings level and Chasity’s with her inner DJ. Heartland had some of Chasity’s compositions scattered in. Keepsake was split by the harvest season timeline.

I love how each book in this series has an extra kick to make it special. She didn’t get to mourn like how she wanted to. In a way, she lost a family member and the love of his life, even if that was only to prison. I can’t even begin to imagine who hard it was for Sophie after her brother died. In this book, Jude and Sophie’s love for each other is so strong it’s almost tangible. But usually, I struggle to feel that the two characters are in love. I’ve been on a romance kick lately where all I want to read it romance. In this book Jude does have cravings and it’s an ongoing struggle to maintain his sobriety. I’ve read a few books where a character has a drug addiction, but in those the character never has cravings for the drugs so it never felt organic. Usually I don’t like second chance romances, but I love this story!!!Īnd yes, I did get misty eyed several times reading this book. No one wants to see Sophie and Jude back together, least of all Sophie’s police chief father. But the looks he sends her now speak volumes.

She knows it’s foolish to yearn for the man who returned all the heartsick letters she wrote him in prison. And he’d never turn up volunteer in the church kitchen. The bad boy who used to love her didn’t have big biceps and sun-kissed hair.

It’s hard not to stare at how much he’s changed. But an ex-con in recovery for his drug addiction can’t find a job just anywhere.įor Sophie Haines, coming face to face with the man who broke her heart is gut-wrenching. He’d steer clear of Colebury, Vermont forever if he could. A man is dead, and there’s no way he can ever right that wrong. Jude lost everything one spring day when he crashed his car into an apple tree on the side of the road. When I was nineteen, he broke both my heart and my family. When I was eighteen, I let him take me there.

When I was seventeen, I thought Jude was sent to me from heaven.
