Welcome to the second month of the Unlocking the Past 2021 Reading Challenge. This month focuses on the American Revolution and War of 1812. At the request of one of my readers, I’m posting suggestions from my bookshelf at the beginning of each month. This month’s suggestions feature some books from my e-book shelves too. I’ve read a good number of these, but some are still waiting for free time. Add your suggestions in the comments, and/or tell me what you are reading. Have you read any of these below? Which one should I choose for this month? Let me know.
Monthly Reminders:
*If you read a book for January, don’t forget to go to yesterday’s post (RCR: Tidewater Bride by Laura Frantz) to comment and get your name entered for your chance to win a print copy. (You’ll also earn your entry for the end of the year giveaway.)
*You can also join the Facebook Group. for more interaction and suggestions, or if you’d like a bookmark to remind you of the monthly challenges, fill out this Google Form.
Suggestions
Pirate of My Heart by Jamie Carie
When her doting father dies, Lady Kendra Townsend is given a choice: marry the horrid man of her cold, money-grubbing uncle’s choosing or leave England to risk a new life in America with unknown relatives. Armed with the faith that God has a plan for her, Kendra boards a cargo ship and meets American sea captain Dorian Colburn. But the captain has been wounded by a woman before and guards his independent life. A swashbuckling man doesn’t need an English heiress to make him slow down, feel again, or be challenged with questions about his faith-or so he thinks. It is not until Dorian must save Kendra from the dark forces surrounding her that he decides she may be worth the risk.
Wind Dancer by Jamie Carie
Raised in a British-held frontier town during the American Revolution, Isabelle Renoir is not like other women around her. A free spirit, she dances in the moonlight as a praise offering to God and is more at home fearlessly taking her long rifle and knife into the woods for adventure and inspiration.
But Isabelle’s latest journey may be more than even her strength can handle when a huge storm throws the raven-haired beauty off course and into the path of rugged American spy Samuel Holt. After matching wits and denying their passion for each other, they are attacked by Indians, held prisoner, and forced to watch the horrific killing of Isabelle’s brother. Now together but in captivity, they must fight spiritual forces that no knife or rifle could ever conquer in order to be free.
The Scarlet Coat by Angela K. Couch (Book #1, Hearts at War, I’ve read.)
Surrounded by the musket fire of the American Revolution, Rachel Garnet prays for her family to be safe. When the British invade the Mohawk Valley and her father and brother don’t return from the battle, she goes in pursuit of them. She finds her brother alive but her father has been killed at the hand of the enemy. Amidst the death, how can she ignore a cry for help? Rachel reluctantly takes in a badly wounded British officer. But how long can her sense of Christian duty repress her hatred for his scarlet coat? Passages of Scripture and fleeting images of society are all Andrew Wyndham recalls after he awakens to the log walls of his gentle prison. Even his name eludes him. Rachel Garnet insists he is a captain in the British army. He mourns the loss of his memory, but how can he hope to remember war when his “enemy” is capturing his heart? Andrew’s injuries are severe, his memory slow to return, and the secret of his existence too perilous to ignore. As Rachel nurses him back to health, his hidden scarlet coat threatens to expose the deeds of her merciful heart, and Andrew is forced to face a harrowing decision—Stay hidden and risk losing the woman he loves or turn himself in and risk losing his life.
Other books in the series that fit the February time period: The Patriot and the Loyalist, The Tory’s Daugher
The Lacemaker by Laura Frantz (I’ve read.)
When colonial Williamsburg explodes like a powder keg on the eve of the American Revolution, Lady Elisabeth “Liberty” Lawson is abandoned by her fiancé and suspected of being a spy for the hated British. No one comes to her aid save the Patriot Noble Rynallt, a man with formidable enemies of his own. Liberty is left with a terrible choice. Will the Virginia belle turned lacemaker side with the radical revolutionaries, or stay true to her English roots? And at what cost?
Historical romance favorite Laura Frantz is back with a suspenseful story of love, betrayal, and new beginnings. With her meticulous eye for detail and her knack for creating living, breathing characters, Frantz continues to enchant historical fiction readers who long to feel they are a part of the story.
Love’s Reckoning by Laura Frantz
On a bitter December day in 1785, Silas Ballantyne arrives at the door of master blacksmith Liege Lee in York, Pennsylvania. Just months from becoming a master blacksmith himself, Silas is determined to finish his apprenticeship and move west. But Liege soon discovers that Silas is a prodigious worker and craftsman and endeavors to keep him in York. Silas becomes interested in both of Liege’s daughters, the gentle and faith-filled Eden and the clever and high-spirited Elspeth. When he chooses one, will the other’s jealousy destroy their love?
In this sweeping family saga set in western Pennsylvania, one man’s choices in love and work, in friends and enemies, set the stage for generations to come. Love’s Reckoning is the first entry in The Ballantyne Legacy, a rich, multi-layered historical quartet from talented writer Laura Frantz, beginning in the late 1700s and following the Ballantyne family through the end of the Civil War.
A Captive Heart by Michlle Griep
The wild American wilderness is no place for an elegant English governess
On the run from a brute of an aristocratic employer, Eleanor Morgan escapes from England to America, the land of the free, for the opportunity to serve an upstanding Charles Town family. But freedom is hard to come by as an indentured servant, and downright impossible when she’s forced to agree to an even harsher contract—marriage to a man she’s never met.
Backwoodsman Samuel Heath doesn’t care what others think of him—but his young daughter’s upbringing matters very much. The life of a trapper in the Carolina backcountry is no life for a small girl, but neither is abandoning his child to another family. He decides it’s time to marry again, but that proves to be an impossible task. Who wants to wed a murderer?
Both Samuel and Eleanor are survivors, facing down the threat of war, betrayal, and divided loyalties that could cost them everything, but this time they must face their biggest challenge ever . . .Love.
Captured by Love by Jody Hedlund
Michigan Territory, 1814
A voyageur and a young woman swept up in a time of upheaval and danger discover firsthand the high price of freedom.
The British Army has taken control of Michilimackinac Island and its fort, forcing the Americans to swear an oath of loyalty to the crown in order to retain their land. Pierre Durant is a fur trader who returns after being away from the island for years, only to find the family farm a shambles and those he cares about starving and at the mercy of British invaders.
Torn between the adventurous life of fur trading and guilt over neglecting his defenseless mother, Pierre is drawn deeper into the fight against the British–and into a relationship with Angelique MacKenzie, a childhood friend who’s grown into a beautiful woman. She now finds herself trapped by the circumstances of war and poverty, and the cruelty of her guardian, Ebenezer Whiley.
As tensions mount and the violence rages on, Pierre and Angelique must decide where their loyalties rest and how much they’ll risk for love.
The Gathering Dawn by Sally Laity and Dianna Crawford (Freedom’s Holy Light, Book #1)
British-born Susannah Harrington, expecting to begin a new life in the Colonies, finds herself instead tossed into the midst of Colonial unrest that sparks schemes and intrigues against her motherland. Unable to forget the brave and handsome postrider who comes to her rescue on the Philadelphia docks, she cannot dismiss having witnessed this seemingly honorable man assisting smugglers! Nevertheless, she harbors the hope of sometime meeting him again. Daniel Haynes, a devoted Christian, abandons his ministerial studies to assist in the dangerous fight for freedom from England’s tyranny. Hoping to end the recent unwarranted taxation and military occupation by the British, he delivers secret messages and inflammatory news articles for patriots Sam Adams and John Hancock. Drawn by unforeseen circumstances to a beautiful English woman he aids on the docks of Philadelphia, he is convinced that God caused their paths to cross…but separated by both treachery and tragedy, it will take nothing less than divine intervention to bring two people from opposite worlds together. The American Colonies are experiencing a great Christian revival in 1770, but the new freedom found in Christ strains beneath the oppression of the Crown. What starts as discontented whispers will soon grow into the rebellious battle cry, “No king but King Jesus!”
The Cumberland Bride by Shannon McNear
Love and Adventure Are Discovered on the Wilderness Road
In 1794, when Kate Gruener’s father is ready to move the family farther west into the wilderness to farm untouched land, Kate is eager to live out her own story of adventure like he did during the War for Independence and to see untamed lands. And she sets her sights on learning more about their scout, Thomas Bledsoe. Thomas’s job is to get settlers safely across the Kentucky Wilderness Road to their destination while keeping an ear open for news of Shawnee unrest. But naïve Kate’s inquisitive nature could put them both in the middle of a rising tide of conflict. Is there more to Thomas’s story than he is willing to tell? Is there an untapped courage in Kate that can thwart a coming disaster?
The Messenger by Siri Mitchell
Hannah Sunderland felt content in her embrace of the Quaker faith…until her twin brother ran off and joined the army and ended up captured and in jail. Suddenly Hannah’s world turns on end. She longs to bring her brother some measure of comfort in the squalid, frigid prison where he remains. But the Quakers believe they are not to take sides, not to take up arms. Can she sit by and do nothing while he suffers?
Jeremiah Jones has an enormous task before him. Responsibility for a spy ring is now his, and he desperately needs access to the men in prison, whom they are seeking to free. A possible solution is to garner a pass for Hannah. But while she is fine to the eye, she holds only disdain for him–and agreeing would mean disobeying those she loves and abandoning a bedrock of her faith.
With skill and sensitivity, Mitchell tells a story of two unlikely heroes seeking God’s voice, finding the courage to act, and discovering the powerful embrace of love.
Prize of My Heart by Lisa Norato
An unsolved mystery separates ex-privateersman Captain Brogan Talvis from his lost son–his only living relation, his only family. Shortly before her tragic demise, his wife abandoned their infant to strangers, refusing to reveal the child’s whereabouts. Now, three years later, Brogan has discovered the boy at the home of a shipbuilder’s daughter, Lorena Huntley.
Lorena guards a dark secret about her young charge. She finds herself falling for the heroic captain who has come to claim his newly built ship, unaware his motive for wooing her is to befriend the boy he plans on reclaiming as his own–until the day another’s evil deceit leaves her helplessly shipbound, heading toward England.
As the perfect opportunity to reclaim his son unfolds, Brogan is haunted by thoughts of Lorena in her dire circumstance, and he is forced to make a heartrending choice between his child and the woman who has begun to capture his heart. But only his unselfish sacrifice can win him the greatest prize of all–love.
The Liberty Bride by MaryLu Tyndall
War Forces a Choice Between Love and Country
A trip home from England to Maryland in 1812 finds Emeline Baratt a captive on a British warship and forced to declare her allegiance between the British and Americans. Remaining somewhat politically neutral on a ship where her nursing skills are desperately needed is fairly easy—until she starts to have feelings for the first lieutenant who becomes her protector. However, when the captain sends her and Lieutenant Owen Masters on land to spy, she must choose between her love for him and her love for her country.
The Creole Bride by Beth White (Book #2, The Gulf Coast Chronicles)
All along the eastern seaboard, the American struggle for independence rages. In the British-held southern port of Mobile, Alabama, the conflict brewing is quieter–though no less deadly. The lovely Frenchwoman Lyse Lanier is best friends with the daughter of the British commander. Rafael Gonzalez is a charming young Spanish merchant with a secret mission and a shipment of gold to support General Washington. As their paths cross and their destinies become increasingly tangled, Lyse and Rafael must decide where their true loyalties lie–and somehow keep Lyse’s family from being executed as traitors to the British Crown.
With spectacular detail that brings the Colonial South alive, Beth White invites readers into a world of intrigue and espionage from a little-known side of the American Revolutionary War. Her richly textured settings and characters delight while fast pacing and closely held secrets will keep readers turning the pages.
Other books in the series that fit the February time period: The Magnolia Dutchess
Ring of Secrets by Roseanna M. White (Book #1, Culper Ring, I’ve read.)
This exciting romantic spy novel from Roseanna M. White combines fascinating cloak-and-dagger secrets with a tale of love and intrigue during the Revolutionary War.
Winter Reeves is an aristocratic Patriot forced to hide her heart amid the Loyalists of the City of New York. She has learned to keep her ears open so she can pass information on British movements to Robbie Townsend, her childhood friend, and his spy ring. If she’s caught, if she’s hung for espionage…well, she won’t be. Robbie has taught her the tools of the trade: the wonders of invisible ink, drop locations and, most importantly, a good cover.
Bennet Lane returns to New York from his Yale professorship with one goal: to find General Washington’s spy hidden among the ranks of the elite. Searching for a wife was supposed to be nothing more than a convenient cover story for his mission, but when he meets Winter, with her too-intelligent eyes in her too-blank face, he finds a mystery that can’t be ignored.
Both believers…and both committed to a separate cause. Will their faith in God lead them to a shared destiny or lives lived apart?
Other books in the series that fit the February time period: Whispers from the Shadows
The Patriot Bride by Kimberley Woodhouse
Spies Work Together for the Patriot Cause
Faith Jackson is a wealthy widow, friend of George Washington, and staunch supporter of the Patriot cause. Matthew Weber is friends with both Ben Franklin and his son William, who increasingly differ in their political views; and Matthew finds himself privy to information on both sides of the conflict. When a message needs to get to a spy among the Loyalists, Faith bravely steps up and in turn meets Matthew Weber. Suddenly she believes she could love again. But someone else has his eye on the Faith she portrays in elite social circles. What will Matthew and Faith have to sacrifice for the sake of their fledgling country?
Check out these alternatives to Amazon: Baker Bookhouse Barnes & Noble Books-a-Million Book Depository Bookshop.org Christianbook.com Get It Local Indiebound.org
Leave Your Comments:
If you have a favorite book or author who writes in this time, put it in the comments so other readers can know who to go search out for options. Old or new, it doesn’t matter. 🙂
I haven’t read her yet but I have three books by Margurite Gray:
Hold Me Close
Surround Me
Bring Me Near
She has another coming out.
I’m reading The Lacemaker.
I have read all the Daughters of The Mayflower and they are excellent and a bit shorter than the other novels.
I’ve read Ring of Secrets and The Creole Bride, two of my favorites. The others look great! I do have Michelle Griep’s book.
The Daughters of the Mayflower series are great for the months when I can’t devote time to the longer books I prefer. Like this month I’ll turn edits in mid-way through the month, but I have other major events I’m preparing for that will limit my time to read and get all the blog posts together. So that is what I’ll be reading from this month. I haven’t read The Creole Bride, but I really want to. Maybe if I find time this month, that will be what I sneak in as an extra. Both The Lacemaker and Ring of Secrets were great books! I hope you’re enjoying the Lacemaker.
Oh, I’ll have to check those out!
I have gladly read both books by Laura Frantz ((love her books)), the one by Siri Mitchell ((love hers, too)), and the Culper Ring Series by Roseanne M. White ((…and hers 😆)). I’m not very great at remembering time periods of the books that I read, except that they are always at least 200 years in the past, so I was so excited to know I have and have read many of your recommendations! I think I have one or both of those Bride books, so I’ll likely choose one of those for this month. Thank you so much for this list!
How could I forget?! I have also read “The Captive Heart” by Michelle Green, as she is one of my favorite authors of all time. Just had to throw that in there! 😁
LOVE LOVE LOVE Michelle Griep. Still my favorite author with Joanna Davidson Politano!
P.S. I just saw where my trusty autocorrect failed me, yet again, with Michelle GRIEP’s name. 🤦🏻♀️ Embarrassing. 😑 I’m glad you knew what I meant! 😅
Yes, we do seem to have similar tastes in books! I love that. ☺ I’ll have to check out Joanna Davidson Politico, now, too. 🤩
You’ll love her! And yes! Autocorrect is evil!
I guess that means we have very similar taste in books! LOL I can’t wait to have more time to read again!
There are so many books on my TBR pile that I am going to have a hard time picking!
LOL, I understand completely!
I am so excited! Is it bad that I added almost all of these to my to read list?!
Absolutely not! There are always so many great reads. I wish there were more time in my day/week.
Amber Lynn Perry has an entire series set during this time period. It’s called Daughters of His Kingdom.
So Fair a Lady
So True a Love
So Rare a Gift
So Pure a Heart
So Bright a Hope
Perfect! Thanks so much for sharing!
I really enjoyed freedoms light by Colleen coble. It covered a subject I truly love: lighthouses!
I am going to read the messenger by Siri Mitchell. I am confined by what I can find on hoopla at this time in audiobook format. However I have now read and loved 2 of michelle Griep books and will have to try to find this one too!
I understand being confined to audiobooks during certain periods of life. 🙂 Let me know how the Messenger is. I haven’t gotten around to it, but I want to.
Is this where I comment what I read for the February challenge? If not, I can amend that!!!!
I read The Tea Chest by Heidi Chiavaroli. I was drawn in by the split time story, even though I didn’t anticipate enjoying that format! Very intriguing story 😁
This absolutely is where you record it. I’m so glad you were able to read. Did you enjoy the story? I haven’t read a split time yet. I’m sort of nervous about it. I’ve added your entry to my database.
I read The Lacemaker by Laura Frantz. I know–I should have read it a loooong time ago, but I’m glad I’ve read it now! I loved it of course!
I am so glad you enjoyed it. The Lacemaker and The Messenger seemed to be the top two picks this month! I’ve got your entries entered into my database.