Mark Twain wrote: No country can be well governed unless its citizens as a body keep religiously before their minds that they are the guardians of the law, and that the law officers are only the machinery for its execution, nothing more.
Category: Romance
Average Rating: 2.0
When life feels like it's closing in around you, sometimes the solution is to open the doors wide and invite others in...
Jewel McKerry is on the brink of unraveling as she heads home to Oregon to help care for her father who has early-onset dementia. Her thirteen-year-old daughter is upset about the move. Her beekeeper dad is a humorous handful. Her mom is overworked and overwhelmed. Finances are stretched tight. And, according to her father, the neighbors are nothing but trouble.
Despite all of these challenges, Jewel takes on one more when she convinces her parents to turn their decrepit farmhouse into a B&B in order to make some needed money. Her old high school flame turned contractor steps in to help, but Jewel isn't sure she can really trust him. And those "troublesome" neighbors? The handsome widower and his teenage daughter just might be the key to making all this work.
Get ready for a summer filled with family, good humor, and new beginnings!
Rating: 2
This story is too sappy and banal. I didn't find anything humorous about it at all. The story isn't well researched and it glosses over pertinent details that would have made it interesting. The characters are predictable and unrealistic. Worst of all, there's too much praying. Leah Horowitz performs quite adequately. But, I can't recommend this story even to fans of romance.
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