About the Book
Book: Rescued Heart
Author: Angela Hunt
Genre: Biblical Fiction
Release Date: October 7, 2025
In Ur of the Chaldees, Ishcah faces the daunting prospect of marrying Abram, a man she has never met and who renames her Sarai on their wedding day. Their union tests her as she grapples with uncertainty and Abram’s devotion to an unseen God. Her skepticism toward seemingly impossible promises grows, and only a miracle can prove Adonai’s faithfulness.
Click here to get your copy!
My Thoughts:
In Rescued Heart we are given a fictional account of Sarah, the wife of Abram, and a detailed look at how her life might have been. The author has notes and answers several questions in the back of her book as to why she took some liberties and why she wrote certain scenes.
I have always enjoyed author Hunts's detailed fictional reads, and this one was no different. Though it does take creative license, I did enjoy getting into what Sarah may have been thinking, what her life was like before marriage, during marriage, and her walking alongside Abraham as his wife. Things like her extraordinary beauty and giving birth well past her time and into her old age makes her a very unique person. Her rocky relationship with Hagar and all the drama that came from that. She was also married to a man who was destined to be the father of many.
After the flood, and Noah and his sons, Abram picks up the one true message of the only God to bring to a world that has forgotten him yet again. There is always a witness and bringing in all the well-known parts of Genesis made this a riveting read.
I was provided a copy of this novel from the publisher. I was not required to post a positive review, and all views and opinions are my own.
About the Author
More from Angela
Can you please provide a brief summary of your novel Rescued Heart?
Rescued Heart is the story of Sarah—taken from Scripture and another ancient manuscript, the Book of Jasher. Scripture tells us relatively little about the first matriarch of our family, so this novel explores more of what her life might have been like.
What drew you to write about Sarah as the first subject in your new MATRIARCHS series?
I have been writing biblical historical fiction for a few years now, and I had yet to go back this far in history. It’s a challenge to find authentic history about the bronze age, but when you can find something, it’s fascinating.
How did you research daily life in ancient Mesopotamia and the nomadic existence Sarah would have experienced?
As I mentioned above, I used the Book of Jasher to fill in many of the details that Scripture does not give us. Jasher does not claim to be inspired Scripture, but it does give us ideas about what daily life in that age could have been like.
Sarah faces many difficult situations in her journey, including barrenness in a culture that deeply valued fertility. How did you approach writing about her emotional struggles?
Writing about infertility was easy for me, as my husband and I personally experienced it— though not nearly as long as Sarah did. I simply took what I knew and multiplied it by decades of years.
The relationship between Sarah and Abraham spans decades. What challenges did you face in portraying their evolving relationship over such a long period?
A marriage, like any relationship, goes through seasons—the honeymoon phase, the getting to-know you phase (especially in an arranged marriage), as well as various struggles regarding finances and leadership. Sarah put up with a lot—Abraham’s lies about their relationship, for one thing, and Sarah’s twice ending up in harems of foreign kings—yet they remained committed to each other.
How did you balance staying true to the biblical account while creating a full narrative with dialogue and interior thoughts?
Whenever I write in this genre, I aspire to 1) never contradict the biblical record, 2) never contradict the historical record, and 3) fill in the rest with what fits with what we can know about society, environment, governments, and technology at that time. The rest is emotional, because human nature does not change.
Sarah is often remembered for her laughter when told she would bear a son in her old age. How did you interpret this pivotal moment in her story?
Wouldn’t you laugh if someone told you—at ninety—that in a year you’d be nursing your own baby? I would! Sarah was not only old, but she had also been through menopause, so she thought of herself as a dried husk, no longer a woman. No wonder she laughed.
What surprising insights about Sarah did you discover during your research and writing process?
I don’t know if I “discovered” this, but I portrayed her as a woman who trusted in God through her husband. After all, Abraham was the one who talked to God, saw Him, prayed to Him—Sarah simply believed in her husband, who believed in God. But when God told Abraham to sacrifice Sarah’s beloved son, she had a real crisis of faith, and Jewish tradition holds that the shock of that realization was what resulted in her death. If you examine Scripture, you’ll see that Abraham and Isaac left Beersheba, where the family had been living, and went to Mount Moriah for the sacrifice . . . but Sarah doesn’t die in Beersheba, where she must have been living, but at Mamre, where Abraham had built an altar. And that’s all I can say without spoiling the ending of the book.
What do you hope readers take away from Rescued Heart?
That our relationship with God must be personal, not secondhand.
What are you working on next?
I am currently writing Righteous Heart, the story of Rebekah. Loving the research.
Blog Stops
Debbie’s
Dusty Deliberations, October 10
Mary Hake,
October 10
Inspired
by Fiction, October 11
Devoted
Steps, October 12
Texas Book-aholic,
October 13
She
Lives to Read, October 14
Pause for
Tales, October 14
Truth and Grace
Homeschool Academy, October 15
Happily
Managing a Household of Boys, October 16
Lily’s Corner,
October 17
Abba’s Prayer
Warrior Princess, October 18
For Him and My
Family, October 19
Stories By Gina,
October 20 (Author Interview)
Book
Butterfly in Dreamland, October 20
Cover
Lover Book Review, October 21
Holly’s Book
Corner, October 22
Leslie’s
Library Escape, October 23
The
Bookish Pilgrim, October 23
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Angela is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Barnes & Noble Gift Card and a copy of the book!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/3d278/rescued-heart-celebration-tour-giveaway
Sounds awesome
ReplyDeleteI like the review. The book sounds interesting and well-done, especially the author’s additional notes.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a fabulous book.
ReplyDeleteIm looking forward to checking this book out. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDelete