Saturday, February 25, 2023

Review: A Castaway in Cornwall

A Castaway in Cornwall A Castaway in Cornwall by Julie Klassen
My rating: πŸ’›πŸ’›πŸ’›πŸ’›

I love a good regency romance and Julie Klassen’s novels is always an enjoyment. The audiobook narrator is always brilliant on a Julie Klassen novel and this one was no exception.

I enjoyed the dashing mysterious gentlemen, Alex and his heart and goal to free his brother, Laura who loves to find beach treasures and get them in the hands of the owners which allowed closure for some of the remaining loved ones, and the suspense plot with a charming bad guy.

Though the characters experienced loss and heartache, they also experienced hope, love, reconciliations and happy endings.

*I listened to the audiobook on Audible.*

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About the book:


Laura Callaway daily walks the windswept Cornwall coast, known for many shipwrecks but few survivors. She feels like a castaway, set adrift on the tides of fate by the deaths of her parents and left wanting answers. Now living with her parson uncle and his parsimonious wife in North Cornwall, Laura is viewed as an outsider even as she yearns to belong somewhere again.

When ships sink, wreckers scour the shore for valuables, while Laura searches for clues to the lives lost. She has written letters to loved ones and returned keepsakes to rightful owners. She collects seashells and mementos, and when a man is washed ashore, she collects him too.

As Laura and a neighbor care for the castaway, the mystery surrounding him grows. He has abrasions and a deep cut that looks suspiciously like a knife wound, and he speaks in careful, educated English, yet his accent seems odd. Other clues wash ashore, and Laura soon realizes he is not who he seems to be. Their attraction grows, and while she longs to return the man to his rightful home, evidence against him mounts. With danger pursuing them from every side, will Laura ever find the answers and love she seeks?

About the author:



Julie Klassen loves all things Jane—
Jane Eyre and Jane Austen. A graduate of the University of Illinois, Julie worked in publishing for sixteen years and now writes full time. Three of her books, The Silent GovernessThe Girl in the Gatehouse, and The Maid of Fairbourne Hall, have won the Christy Award for Historical Romance. She has also won the Midwest Book Award, the Minnesota Book Award, and Christian Retailing’s BEST Award, and been a finalist in the Romance Writers of America’s RITA Awards and ACFW’s Carol Awards. She blogs at http://www.inspiredbylifeandfiction.com.
Julie and her husband have two sons and live in a suburb of St. Paul, Minnesota.

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