![]() The story opens in 1866 with Amanda Stewart mourning the recent death of her father, a lawyer dedicated to the abolitionist cause. ![]() I hadn’t read an Inspie before this, so I’m sure there are things I missed (and there were a couple of phrases that were unfamiliar to me), but I didn’t notice anything that made me feel as if I wasn’t part of the potential target readership. I didn’t know that these books were in the Inspirational genre when I bought The Preacher’s Promise, but I didn’t think it would be a big deal for me unless they were heavily tilted toward proselytizing, and since they aren’t, it wasn’t. I hadn’t read anything about the novella when I read the novel, so I think readers can pick up either installment without difficulty. Jayne had independently decided to read and review the novella, so we thought reviews of both stories would be fun to do. When you posted in DA’s author open thread I decided I wanted to read and review the full length novel. I first learned about your new historical romances when several readers in my Twitter feed raved about your lovely covers. Sunita B- Reviews / Book Reviews / C+ Reviews 19th century / African American / American historical / inspirational / POC / POC author / slavery 12 Comments ![]() ![]() AugREVIEW: The Preacher’s Promise by Piper Huguley ![]()
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