Wednesday, April 20, 2016

A few notes about Keeping Promises, the most recent addition to the Silver Springs Contemporary series.  (Without giving away too much!)

Although Keeping Promises is the eighth book written in this series, chronologically it comes after book 5, Running out of time.  It takes place approximately five years after Elizabeth's Hero.

If you read Elizabeth's Hero, the first book in the series, you'll remember FBI agent Carl "Spence" Spencer.


Spence, the hero in Keeping Promises, is about to embark on several personal and spiritual journeys that will compel him to reevaluate the path he's on.

Keeping Promises is appropriately listed in the Christian-Romance category.

It is a story that will appeal to both men and women.

It's clean content plus uplifting and adventurous plot is safe for teenage readers.  There is a message for young people about the value of abstaining from intimacy until marriage.  (My teen daughter loved the book!)

Keeping Promises
Available in electronic format, as well as regular and extra large print format.

     For the past eighteen months, Jordan Gray has raised her deceased sister’s children alone.  She loves and wants what’s best for them.  Unfortunately, her teen-aged nephew doesn’t care.  Caleb is constantly in trouble, and each new infraction is worse than the last.  With nowhere else to turn, she begins to search for the boy’s unknown father, convinced that finding him will be the hard part.  She couldn’t be more wrong.  Her intense reaction to the man is as exhilarating as it is bewildering.  Surely, this former bad boy couldn’t be the one God has chosen for her?
     When FBI Agent Carl Spencer learns that someone is using cyberspace to look for him, he does what he’s trained to do – hunt the hunter.  When the enemy turns out to be a pretty young woman, he’s surprised, but that’s nothing compared to the jolt that rocks his world when she delivers her news – he’s a father.  While Spence builds a relationship with his troubled son, he battles a strong pull toward the boy’s virtuous aunt.  Too bad she’s not his type.  Struggling with a mutual attraction seems challenging enough, until a new danger threatens to destroy them.

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