About the Book
Book: Matching Points
Author: Nancy J. Farrier
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Release Date: September 9, 2020
She doesn’t hold his past against him…can he forgive hers?
Fresh out of prison, Asia Jessup wishes she could change her past and maybe her future. She has no family and no one to turn to. All she has is her newfound faith. She returns to the town where she spent a couple of idyllic summers to find family she didn’t know she had. Her devastating secret won’t bring a joyful reunion. Will it destroy her last hope?
Ian Kittridge has his own thriving restaurant, is a respected business owner, and is active in his community. Thanks to a teenage Asia’s empathy one summer he’d been pulled back from the brink of ruining his life and ending up like his father—a murderer. He is working hard to eradicate the past and rise above the murmurs of “like father, like son.”
When Ian runs into Asia he can’t believe she’s returned to their coastal California town. Although he’s eager to reconnect, he isn’t looking for a serious relationship—he can’t take the chance of becoming his father. Asia is wary of Ian’s friendship because of her shameful past and the sins of her mother and father. As Asia’s secrets quake the family she hoped to find, can she and Ian find their way through the storm, to a peaceful resolution, and look toward the future?
Click here to get your copy!
My Thoughts:
Matching Points is a story about family, their sins, and how to deal with that in the present and going into the future.
When we first meet Asia, she has come back to her cousin Cinda's home in hopes of getting the answers she needs about her past. She is also keeping some big secrets from everyone. Hoping she can get the answers she so desperately needs before everyone will turn on her.
Ian is running from his past and trying very hard to not be like his father. Neither Ian or Asia have had the best of childhoods and they did connect with each other during past summers. Now Asia has stepped back into his life and he does not want her walking away from him again.
However, the past will not stay hidden and the secrets their parents tried to keep from their children are coming out. The fallout will be painful, but can they step back and see that the truth will set them all free? All of these characters were carrying very heavy burdens. Some of them by their own hand, others by their moms and dads. Sin is a great burden, but we do not have to bear it, ours or anyone else's. This story is a great reminder of that and that we can choose not to let the past define us.
I received a copy of this novel from the author. I was not required to post a positive review and all views and opinions are my own.
About the Author
Nancy J Farrier is a best-selling, award winning author of over twenty-five books. Nancy has written both historical and contemporary fiction, as well as nonfiction for the Christian market. Her Southwest fiction is filled with characters who face real life issues, which she hopes will encourage her readers. Nancy lives in Arizona in the Sonoran Desert and loves the sunshine and most of the time enjoys the heat. She lives with her husband or thirty-seven years, four cats, and dog. Nancy enjoys early morning hikes, spending time with her family, reading, and going to church.
More from Nancy
From the moment I first pictured Asia standing across from that quilt shop, I knew I had to tell her story. She carried so much emotional baggage and such longing, but I didn’t know why. Going on that journey to find where she’d come from and why she was here at this place, in this moment, was such a rollercoaster ride.
Exploring the theme of family and how our families impact our past proved both exhilarating and painful. I remember hearing a man say he couldn’t help being the way he was because of his father’s influence. That man was a Christian. My first thought was that he has a new Father and he is to be like Christ. Like God.
This is why both Ian and Asia struggle with the concept of having a parent they were compared to in an unflattering light. Ian couldn’t change what his father did, he could only make his own choices and be a different person. To be like Father, like son. Asia, too, had people assume she would be her mother’s daughter, but she wasn’t. Her choice was to live a different life, despite pressure to be as immoral as her mother.
Our choices are what make us who we are. How we choose to live. How we choose to forgive. How we choose to love. And Who we choose to love and follow.
Exploring these themes in Matching Points kept me on my toes. Seeing Asia and Ian work out their choices and their journey proved exhilarating. I hope my readers find encouragement in the pages of this book and the lives of the characters.
Blog Stops
Blossoms
and Blessings, November 2 (Author Interview)
deb’s Book
Review, November 2
Sara Jane Jacobs,
November 3
Adventures
of a Travelers Wife, November 4
Ashley’s
Bookshelf, November 4
Happily
Managing a Household of Boys, November 5
Pause for Tales,
November 6
Artistic
Nobody, November 7 (Guest Review from Joni Truex)
Wishful Endings,
November 8 (Author Interview)
Batya’s Bits,
November 8
Texas Book-aholic,
November 9
Truth and Grace
Homeschool Academy, November 10
Because I
said so — and other adventures in Parenting, November 11
Inklings
and notions, November 12
Debbie’s
Dusty Deliberations, November 13
For Him and My
Family, November 14
Locks, Hooks
and Books, November 15
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Nancy is giving away the grand prize package of a Kindle Fire 7 and a handmade quilted table runner!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/1032e/matching-points-celebration-tour-giveaway
Good review! Sounds like a thought provoking read!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a good read.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your thoughts on this book, it sounds like a wonderful read.
ReplyDeleteThank you for hosting Matching Points.
ReplyDelete