Showing posts with label Michele Phoenix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michele Phoenix. Show all posts

Sunday, June 23, 2013

In Broken Places by Michele Phoenix (Review)








  • Paperback: 384 pages

  • Publisher: Tyndale House Publishers (April 19, 2013)

  • ISBN-13: 978-1414368412




  • Shelby’s life isn’t glamorous, but it is predictable—and that’s the way she likes it. A survivor of her father’s violence, she has spent a lifetime creating a safe existence devoid of dependence. But her carefully managed world begins to break when, under staggering circumstances, she becomes a single mother to four-year-old Shayla. In a drastic attempt to escape her childhood’s influence, Shelby moves to Germany, but she quickly discovers how intimately linked memory and healing are—and how honestly she must scrutinize her past in order to aspire to a richer future. As she juggles a new job, a new culture, a new daughter, and the attention of an enterprising man, Shelby’s fresh start becomes a quest for the courage to be not only a survivor, but someone who prevails.



    My Review:

    This was a well written heart wrenching book. The book goes back and forth between present day and her childhood. Her older brother Trey and her grew up in an abusive household. Her father was the abuser and her mother let it go on. Trey and Shelby have scars from this. Trey has come out on top but Shelby is still fighting demons. They have not seen their father since they were teens. Out of the blue he dies and leaves Shelby with everything including his four year old daughter Shayla. Shayla seems to be innocent and non abused. She loved her Daddy. Shelby does not want to take her at first but the child would grow up in foster care so she took her. To get a fresh start Shelby moves them to Germany where she works at a school for missionary kids teaching English and Drama. There were several supporting characters that were interesting and well developed. Scott who pursues Shelby even though she does not feel like she will ever be able to love a man. Gus and Bev adopt Shelby and Shayla when they are there. Overall the book was well written and touching. I loved the development of the characters and ached for the abuse they had to go through. Highly Recommended.

    Saturday, June 15, 2013

    Tangled Ashes by Michele Phoenix (Review)








  • Paperback: 384 pages

  • Publisher: Tyndale House Publishers; Original edition (September 21, 2012)

  • ISBN-13: 978-1414368405



  • After invading Lamorlaye, France, Nazi officials don’t hesitate to take over the beautiful Meunier manor as their headquarters, hiring two young Frenchwomen, Marie and Elise, who clean and launder to help supplement their families’ meager incomes. But the girls begin to grow suspicious when medical equipment arrives, followed by an influx of pregnant women. As the Nazis’ plans for the manor become clear, the girls must decide where their loyalties truly lie.

    More than fifty years later . . .
    Architect Marshall Becker arrives in Lamorlaye to begin the massive renovation of a Renaissance-era castle. The project that was meant to provide an escape for Becker instead becomes a gripping glimpse into the human drama that unfolded during the Nazi occupation and seems to live on in midnight disturbances and bizarre acts of vandalism.

    Becker explores the castle’s shadowy history as he seeks to cope with the demons from his own past. Only Jade, the feisty nanny of the owner’s children, is willing to stand up to him. But Becker soon discovers that every one of the château’s inhabitants seems to have something to hide and something to protect—and something worth fighting for.


    My Review:

    I thought this was an okay book. I like the general plot lines but the execution was not as good as it could have been. It was very awkward switching from modern day to the Nazi era. I liked Becker and Jade interacting but wished for more development in the relationship. I did not like the ending at all. It is a stand alone book and I felt disappointed in the closure provided. This could have been a really good book. The plot lines were interesting. The setting and the characters were good. I don't regret reading it. It actually did hold my attention. Fans of historical fiction might like it especially since the Christian aspect is not prominent.




     

    Born in France to an American mother and a Canadian father, Michele Phoenix is an international writer with multi-cultural sensitivities. A graduate of Wheaton College, she taught writing, music, and theater at the boarding school for missionaries' children she attended in Germany as a teenager. She currently works for Global Outreach Mission as an advocate for Third Culture Kids, helping them transition back into North American culture and educating stateside churches and missions about the special needs of this people group. Michele lives in Wheaton, Illinois. Visit www.michelephoenix.com for more information.

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