Margins
Where The Foxgloves Bloom book cover
Where The Foxgloves Bloom
2014
First Published
4.15
Average Rating
66
Number of Pages

"Roan and I thought we’d made our peace with the past. We looked forward to the future. Our days were crammed with plans, work, love. In fact, we looked to the future with too much confidence, the way people do when they think they’ve survived their share of challenges and therefore life owes them nothing but cookies and cream from now on. Which is why we didn’t see Zach Donovan coming." Overwhelmingly romantic, yet poignant, heartwarming, and filled with the quirky family drama of "biscuits and bedroom" southern fiction, WHERE THE FOXGLOVES BLOOM, the first of three novellas, bring readers back to the world of Claire Maloney and Roan Sullivan, whose star-crossed small town Georgia childhood and adult reunion in the go-go 1990's ended with them at peace together on their beloved Dunshinnog mountain, though Roan, the boy from the opposite of the tracks who made good, would always be wary of Claire's volatile and powerful southern family. Now, two years after the events of that New York Times bestselling novel, A PLACE TO CALL HOME, Roan and Claire are married and stand at the cusp of the new millennium in their exurban Atlanta mountain town, Dunderry, where the appearance of morality and the politics of social justice are no less complicated than when Roan and Claire were children. When Roan foils a tattooed stranger's robbery attempt during Dunderry's upscale St. Patrick's Day festival—totally disrupting the festival—the town’s shock is compounded by the handsome thug's claim that he's Roan's young half-brother. When testing proves his claim true, the showdown between past and present is set. Claire never turned her back on Roan; can he do the same for his far more notorious sibling, even if it means bringing a criminal into Claire's family—his family, now that they're married—and risking the tentative truce he's built for her sake? Praise for A Place To Call Home "Rarely will a book touch your heart like A Place to Call Home. So sit back, put your feet up, and enjoy." —The Atlanta Journal and Constitution "A beautiful, believable love story." —The Chicago Tribune "Stylishly written, filled with Southern ease and humor." —Tampa Tribune From the Publisher "Rarely will a book touch your heart like A Place to Call Home. So sit back, put your feet up, and enjoy." —The Atlanta Journal and Constitution "A beautiful, believable love story." —The Chicago Tribune "Stylishly written, filled with Southern ease and humor." —Tampa Tribune “Exciting and heartwarming.” - Booklist “Recommended.” – Library Journal “This is a story for any romantic who wants a bit of mystery, a lot of suspense, a tale of two star-crossed lovers, and a satisfying ending to a fast-paced novel. “ - School Library Journal Deborah Smith is also the author of the No. 1 Kindle bestseller, The Crossroads Cafe, On Bear Mountain, A Gentle Rain, Sweet Hush, and others. An award-winning author of quirky southern women's fiction with strong romantic elements, her novels have sold millions of copies and been translated worldwide. Look for the second novella in the Foxglove Trilogy in late 2014. Excerpt: WHERE THE FOXGLOVES BLOOM Zach Donovan strained at the handcuffs. “All you had to do was let me have the money.” “So you could drag your baby along with you while you robbed the next target?” I grasped Roan’s arm. “Let’s go.” “Where’ll they take her?” Donovan groaned.

Avg Rating
4.15
Number of Ratings
72
5 STARS
51%
4 STARS
22%
3 STARS
19%
2 STARS
4%
1 STARS
3%
goodreads

Author

Deborah Smith
Deborah Smith
Author · 41 books

aka Jackie Leigh aka Della Stone aka Leigh Bridger Bestselling Author Co-founder, co-publisher Vice-president, Editor in Chief BelleBooks, Memphis, TN Deborah Smith is the New York Times bestselling author of A Place to Call Home, and the No. 1 Kindle Bestseller The Crossroads Cafe, A Gentle Rain and other acclaimed romantic novels portraying life and love in the modern Appalachian South. A native Georgian, Deborah is a former newspaper editor who turned to novel-writing with great success. With more than 35 romance, women's fiction and fantasy novels to her credit, Deborah's books have sold over 3 million copies worldwide. Among her honors is a Lifetime Achievement Award from Romantic Times Magazine and a nomination for the prestigious Townsend Literary Award. In 2003 Disney optioned Sweet Hush for film. In 2008 A Gentle Rain was a finalist in Romance Writers of America's RITA awards. For the past fifteen years Deborah has partnered with Debra Dixon to run BelleBooks, a small press originally known for southern fiction, including the Mossy Creek Hometown Series and the Sweet Tea story collections. As editor, she has worked on projects as diverse as the nonfiction Bra Talk book by three-time Oprah Winfrey guest Susan Nethero, and the In My Dreams novella by New York Times bestselling author Sarah Addison Allen. In 2008 BelleBooks launched Bell Bridge Books, an imprint with a focus on fantasy novels and now expanded to include multi-genre fiction—mystery, suspense, thrillers, women's fiction, nonfiction and other. In 2013 BelleBooks acquired the late Linda Kichline's paranormal romance press, ImaJinn Books, and hired legendary editor Brenda Chin, formerly of Harlequin Books, as editorial director. Chin will expand the imprint to cover a diverse mix of all romance types. Deborah's newest books are the Crossroads Cafe novellas: THE BISCUIT WITCH, THE PICKLE QUEEN, THE YARN SPINNER, and THE KITCHEN CHARMER (2014). She released a mini-short story, SAVING JONQUILS, in March 2014. A sexy romantic novella, A HARD MAN TO FIND, is scheduled for later in the month.

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