I still don't have the capacity to post images or create links on blogger, so unfortunately we don't have a cover image or a link to amazon. I apologize! I hope you enjoy the review anyway!
The Freedom of the Soul
By Tracey Bateman
Barbour Publishing, December 2006.
Book Description
The captivating chronicle of a young woman’s struggle to save her homestead, a young man’s determination to expose a pretender, and the yellowed pages of a diary that links their lives together will keep readers spellbound from the first page to the last. Abandoned and abused, Shea Penbrook finds her ancestor Jason Penbrook’s diary and unearths a legacy. Jonas Riley is sent to Oregon to investigate Shea’s claim to his rightful inheritance—the Penbrook estate. Can love bloom in the midst of murder, deceit, and mystery, or will past histories and present betrayals wreck any chance of romance?
Review
The Freedom of the Soul is the stunning sequel to The Color of the Soul, and also the second book in the Penbrook Diaries series. The story was so compelling, and the times so excruciatingly well-portrayed that I couldn’t stop reading. Being a black person in the South—and Georgia in particular—in the 1940s was a terrifying experience. The Klan thrived and the warped sense of justice lived out by the legal systems bred people who thought nothing of lynching others for having “mixed” relationships. That same system segregated everything from health care to education.
This story moved me emotionally on several occasions. The romance was intense and the sense of adventure fantastic. Bateman ties together many loose ends in this novel, and she weaves new threads that are intriguing and well thought out.
The Freedom of the Soul is similar to a thriller in the sense that you want to keep turning the pages to find out what happens next. Just when you think the beloved characters are safe, the Klan shows up again. My nerves were taut as I waited for a horrible fate for the people I’d grown to care so much about. Delight filled my heart as the author found ways to extract the characters from the clutches of a sure death more than once. The faith element was also flawlessly incorporated into the storyline.
Bateman has an uncanny ability to bring history to life. I adore her historical fiction and am hopelessly addicted. I highly recommend this page-turning novel and await the next book in the series with anticipation.
Michelle Sutton
“Writing truth into fiction”
Great Beginnings finalist 2005
writer/book reviewer
www.MichelleSutton.net
http://edgyinspirationalauthor.blogspot.com
Be sure to post early today! Then check in later this afternoon to find out who won our drawing for a free copy of Paul L. Maier's wonderful book The First Christmas.
Friday, December 22, 2006
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3 comments:
It sounds like a great book!
Sounds great! Tracey is such a great writer!
Cherie Japp
I agree. There are just too many books out there that I want to read! But if I did all the reading I want to, I wouldn't be doing any writing. Sigh.
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