Saturday, October 4, 2025

Book Spotlight: Love Across Time by Helena Smrcek

 


A Dual-Timeline Christian Romance Rooted in Faith, Hope, and Lasting Love by Helena Smrcek

A bundle of WWII love letters. A modern-day discovery. Two hearts connected across generations.

When practical real estate investor Nick Mass inherits his grandparents’ home, he stumbles upon a collection of heartfelt letters written during the Second World War. Each page reveals a powerful love story between a young woman waiting at home and the soldier who risked everything for her. Determined to uncover the truth, Nick enlists the help of Joy Christenson, a spirited local historian with a deep love for stories of the past.

As the two work together to trace the legacy hidden in the letters, their journey weaves between past and present—between war-torn love and modern longing. What begins as a historical inquiry soon becomes personal, challenging Nick and Joy to open their hearts to second chances, divine timing, and the possibility that love truly never dies.

ASIN ‏ : B0FKMSR1TC

Publisher ‏ : Independently published

Publication date ‏ : August 5, 2025

Language ‏ : English

Print length ‏ : 184 pages

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎


Purchase here!

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Books I Would or Wouldn't Reread and Why

 


The Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge is hosted by Long and Short Reviews. They offer this blog hop as a weekly prompt to help you gain new friends and visitors. You don't have to participate every week, but if you decide to post and join the blog hop for a week, Long and Short Reviews asks that you share your link on their weekly post on their website (it will be the top post on the home page each Wednesday morning). The link list remains open for new links for 48 hours. Visit the other bloggers participating to see what they discuss that week. Comments are appreciated.  

Happy Wednesday! Welcome to October, the first of the "ber" months. My fall decorations still aren't up. Gasp! But let's forget about all the undone things on our to-do lists and talk about books. 

This week, we are talking about books we would or wouldn't reread and the reasons for those decisions. I'm opting to broaden this prompt to discuss types of books I would or wouldn't read again and why. 

Top Three Books I Wouldn't Reread

Plot-driven novels

What can I say? I am a character-driven reader. Plot-driven fiction will never capture me as fully. Now, a book that is plot-driven with a deep character point of view could work. 

Vampires, fairies, or monsters

With rare exception, books filled with vampires, fairies, or murderous monsters won't make their way into my TBR pile. I've read the occasional great vampire story, but barely tolerate the mention of fairies in novels. I want my monsters as harmless as those found in Scooby Doo! Where Are You? 

Books whose synopses don't match the story/narrative

Don't trick me into thinking I am buying one thing and then give me something totally different. I won't even give those away. They get recycled. 


Top Three Books I Would Reread

A compelling romance with a strong ending

I recall reading one fabulous romantic suspense novel with characters I loved, whose last chapter I read three times. I still remember parts of it. Would read it again if I had the time. 

A book series that builds a community of characters I enjoy getting to know

What draws me to series reading is that they can be set in or around the same location, building a community of characters I enjoy getting to know. I find that when I read a series again, I discover something I didn't catch the first time. 

Nonfiction that gets you thinking

Whether the topic is professional development, historical or current events, theology, or something else, when a nonfiction title gets me thinking or sticks with me a while, I often want to return to it. 

How about you? What are some books you would or wouldn't reread?