Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Review: Letters from My Sister

Letters from My Sister Letters from My Sister by Valerie Fraser Luesse
My rating: 💛💛💛💛

The beautiful cover drew me to pick up this book by this new-to-me-author and I was awarded with beautiful writing.

I did expect the letters to play more of a prominent role from early on, but it did not take away my enjoyment of the story.

Callie and Emmy won me over from the start with their tight bond and different but complimenting personalities. They had their own struggles and fears, losses, and happiness.

It was the first time in a while I was heartbroken with some huge losses and would have preferred to be in that everything just have a happy ending fairy land.

I will be reading more books by this author for sure!

*I received a complimentary copy from the publisher. All opinions expressed are my own.*


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About the book:


Two Sisters. One Single Event. A Family Changed Forever.

At the turn of the twentieth century, sisters Emmy and Callie Bullock are living a privileged life as the only daughters of a wealthy Alabama cotton farmer when their well-ordered household gets turned upside down by the arrival of Lily McGee. Arrestingly beautiful, Lily quickly--and innocently--draws the wrong kind of attention. Meanwhile, Callie meets a man who offers her the freedom to abandon social constraints and discover her truest self.

After Lily has a baby, Callie witnesses something she was never meant to see--or did she? Her memory is a haze, just an image in her mind of Emmy standing on a darkened riverbank and cradling Lily's missing baby girl. Only when the sisters are separated does the truth slowly come to light through their letters--including a revelation that will shape the rest of Callie's life.

Bestselling author Valerie Fraser Luesse weaves a complex and suspenseful tale dripping with intrigue, romance, and Southern charm.

About the author:


Valerie Fraser Luesse is an award-winning magazine writer best known for her feature stories and essays in

Southern Living, where she is currently a senior travel editor. Her work has been anthologized in the audio collection Southern Voices and in A Glimpse of Heaven, an essay collection featuring works by C. S. Lewis, Randy Alcorn, John Wesley, and others. As a freelance writer and editor, she was the lead writer for Southern Living 50 Years: A Celebration of People, Places, and Culture. Specializing in stories about unique pockets of Southern culture, Luesse has published major pieces on the Gulf Coast, the Mississippi Delta, Louisiana's Acadian Prairie, and the Outer Banks of North Carolina. Her editorial section on Hurricane Katrina recovery in Mississippi and Louisiana won the 2009 Writer of the Year award from the Southeast Tourism Society. Luesse earned her bachelor's degree in English at Auburn University in Auburn, Alabama, and her master's degree in English at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. She grew up in Harpersville, Alabama, a rural community in Shelby County, and now lives in Birmingham.

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