About the Book
Book: Tides of Healing
Author: Sandra Merville Hart
Genre: Christian Historical Romance
Release date: February 11, 2025
A Southern belle fights to reclaim her home, but will her spying destroy the Union officer she never meant to love?
Savannah Adair has endured the unimaginable, hiding in a cave while her beloved Vicksburg was under siege. With the city now occupied by Union soldiers, Savannah cannot stand by and do nothing. So when one of the gaunt, half-starved Confederate prisoners asks her to spy for the South, she can’t refuse the chance to take back her home.
First Lieutenant Travis Lawson takes pride in the Union army’s hard-fought victory, but he quickly realizes that the challenges of rebuilding and reconciliation are just beginning . . . and not everyone is appreciative of changes he’s making. Namely, the fiery and alluring Savannah Adair. Despite their differing loyalties and the societal divide between them, Travis cannot deny the growing feelings he has for her. When he is tasked with finding Southern spies in Vicksburg and he captures a female spy, Travis is forced to consider that the woman he’s beginning to love may be the enemy.
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My Thoughts:
Viewpoints and worlds collide when a Southern belle and a Union Lieutenant meet and fall in love. Savannah Adair has a major wakeup call when Union soldiers march into her hometown and set up new rules. Her slaves are set free, she has wounded soldiers in her living room, her father has not come back home from his business trip, and so it is just her mother and her. Savannah nor her mother know how to do anything basic, like cooking, making coffee, or lighting a fire. While I was reading about their struggles, I thought about their reliance on slaves and being pampered their whole lives, was something of a form of slavery itself. A bit of a knowledge gap. So, they must hire friends to come and help them.
During all this, First Lieutenant Travis Lawson has come to
Savannah’s town to occupy, keep order, and try to rebuild. There are bad and
good people on both sides of the war and Travis’s job is not easy when he is
trying to keep law and order. His own Union soldiers are not helping either.
Looting and thievery is much too common on everyone in this war. All sides have
lost much. His one bright spot is the feisty Savannah, whom he cannot seem to
stop thinking about.
As they get to know one another and an uneasy trust
develops, so does those romantic feelings. Can a Union soldier and a staunch and
firm Southern belle find love amidst war, treachery, and chaos? What if one of
them does the unthinkable in a time of war? The title says it all and what a
journey these two have to that healing.
I was provided a copy of this novel by the publisher. I was
not required to post a positive review, and all views and opinions are my own.
About the Author
More from Sandra
As I typed away on this final book in my Spies of the Civil War Series, it felt as if I’d written the entire series to tell this story.
Previously, I had felt a similar importance of an as yet unpublished two-book contemporary series, but the sense that the whole series climaxed with the final book was as surprising as it was welcome.
Because it seemed as if everything that happened in all the earlier books culminated in Book 6 for me as an author. Its significance reverberated in my soul while still researching the events…and weeks before I sat to pen the first page, the first paragraph, the first sentence.
That sense of importance made this book difficult to begin. The early chapters took far longer to write than normal.
I believe that those who only read Tides of Healing will have a satisfying, complete story. Those who read the entire series in order—or at least Books 4-6 set in Vicksburg—will experience a deeper impact as the characters’ stories build on one another.
There is a song in Tides of Healing. As an author, the impact of the lyrics within the story preceded it, meaning that I knew a certain song would play a significant role while still in the research phase.
Let me explain.
When I’m researching a story, I read a variety of nonfiction resources including diaries, journals, and newspaper accounts. My research for Vicksburg during the Civil War led me to song lyrics written by the enslaved.
African American Spirituals, also called Negro Spirituals, were sung before and after the Civil War. These Christian songs served a variety of purposes beyond bolstering hope and faith during dark days. They told stories about Biblical characters like Moses. Some comforted the sorrowful and some rejoiced with the joyful. They were sung in churches, in camp meetings, and in the fields.
They often contained secret messages. “Home” in a song can refer to Heaven, but the secret meaning was a free country. Author Frederick Douglas had been a former slave. He wrote that the lyrics to “O Canaan, Sweet Canaan” signified more than a hope of Heaven. Repeated singing of the lyrics “I am bound for the land of Canaan” announced an intention to go North, their Canaan.
The Underground Railroad is a theme in Tides of Healing. In 1828, Reverend John Rankin built his home on a hill overlooking the Ohio River in Ripley, Ohio. As a station on the Underground Railroad, this home was easily seen from the opposite side of the river in the slave state of Kentucky. Runaways waited for a boat to take them across the river.
It surprised me to learn that the lyrics of “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” are about this station. “I looked over Jordan and what did I see?” refers to the Ohio River. The band of angels are people who rowed them across the wide river to the free state of Ohio.
Neither of these songs is referenced in Tides of Healing. The tune that is in my story was a popular spiritual leading up to the war. I listened to it many times. The message took root in my heart long before it affected my characters.
My research trip to Vicksburg’s battlefield and museums inspired the writing of Streams of Courage, Book 4, River of Peril, Book 5, and Tides of Healing, Book 6.
Avenue of Betrayal, Book 1, is set in the Union capital of Washington City (Washington DC) in 1861, where a surprising number of Confederate sympathizers and spies lived. Boulevard of Confusion and Byway to Danger are set in Richmond, the Confederate capital in 1862. Actual historical spies touch the lives of our fictional family. The heroines in Books 1 – 3 are two sisters and their cousins. Another set of characters begin with Book 4, and three friends are the heroines in Books 4 -6.
Through both real and fictional characters, this series highlights activities spies were involved in and some of the motives behind their decisions.
I invite you to read the whole Spies of the Civil War Series!
Blog Stops
Bizwings Book
Blog, February 26
Holly’s Book
Corner, February 27
Debbie’s
Dusty Deliberations, February 27
Locks, Hooks
and Books, February 28
Truth and Grace
Homeschool Academy, March 1
Pause for
Tales, March 2
Texas Book-aholic,
March 2
Devoted
To Hope, March 3
Happily
Managing a Household of Boys, March 4
Babbling Becky L’s Book
Impressions, March 5
Betti Mace,
March 5
Life on
Chickadee Lane, March 6
Cover
Lover Book Review, March 7
Books
You Can Feel Good About, March 8
Connie’s
History Classroom, March 9
For HIm and My
Family, March 10
Stories By Gina,
March 11 (Author Interview)
Blossoms and Blessings, March 11
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Sandra is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Amazon card!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/00adcf54163
Sounds like a great romance novel.
ReplyDeleteSounds wonderful
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to reading this book. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDelete