The Path of True Love is Never Smooth!
All Willa wants to do is become a doctor, but no medical school in 1865 England will accept a woman, and her doctor father will not support the idea.
Then she accidently finds a love note tucked in an old piece of furniture that originally came from Crestwicke Manor. Beautifully written, unsigned and not addressed to anyone, Willa is so intrigued by it, she wants to go Crestwicke to find the true owner.
In order to make the trip, her father forces her to agree to return home in one month with a man she is willing to marry, or wed the one her dad picks out.
Crestwicke is a hot bed of unhappiness coming from a host of things. There is the prickly, difficult mother of the family Willa must nurse, open hostility from the adult children, and a quirky aunt who seems to lurk around every corner. Willa loses the love note shortly after she arrives. It is found by at least four others who each believe it was sent to them, and it causes no end of upheavals in all their lives.
Willa gets herself into a number of situations, and you will love how she tries to work her way through them. I adored this clean, five-plus star story, including the elements of faith, and all the twists and turns. I would, however, like to know more of what happens in Willa’s life, along with the other characters. Fiction lovers will enjoy the romance, unexpected revelations and surprises mixed throughout this yarn, and I highly recommend it.
Revell Publishing has provided Tickmenot with a complimentary copy of, The Love Note, for the purpose of review. I have not been compensated in any other manner. All opinions expressed are my own, and I was not required, or influenced, to give anything but an honest appraisal. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.
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