About the Book
Book: The Songbird and the Surveyor
Author: Denise Farnsworth writing as Denise Weimer
Genre: Christian Historical Romance
Release Date: November 3, 2025
A marriage of protection. A past full of pain. In Georgia’s wild gold country, love might strike when it’s least expected.
Genevieve Gillbard knows she’s no longer safe in the rough-and-tumble gold rush town when she overhears her controlling guardian’s plot to steal gold from a local mine owner. It takes every ounce of her courage to escape, and now she’ll do anything to keep herself safe, even accept a temporary marriage of convenience from a man who clearly wants nothing more than his independence.
After losing his first wife, surveyor Jesse Holden swore never to let anyone close enough to need him again. But when he discovers the woman he knows as the Songbird of Auraria injured and unconscious in the woods, he can’t abandon her, not with the memory of his failure to protect his wife hanging over him. He’ll keep this woman safe until she’s out of harm’s way, even if it means doing the one thing he swore he’d never do again.
As Genny recovers under Jesse’s care, she discovers he’s nothing like the manipulative men of her past. But can she trust him with her heart—knowing he plans to leave as soon as her guardian is brought to justice? And even then, she fears the sham marriage might not be enough to keep her safe from her guardian’s long reach.
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My Thoughts:
A marriage of convenience or a marriage of protection? That is how Genny's and Jesse's marriage first start out. I found it interesting that two people who were trying so hard to hold onto their individual freedom, and this was a friction between them, would grow to rely on one another and eventually find love.
There was a bit of a dilemma tied up around singer Genny and her guardian. A guardian that had evil ambitions for himself and her. Not only that, but he had many secrets that he kept from her, and as she found them out knew she could only run from him. But as she ran for her freedom, she runs straight into the arms of Jesse Holden. A man that craves freedom more than she does.
This was an adventurous and danger filled romance that was quite good. Marriage of convenience stories are still my favorite, and I very much enjoy watching this couple fall in love in their forced proximity. I also liked how even though both had little faith, the seeds that were planted in their lives did flourish. Jesse needed a second chance and Genny needed a new start.
I also found the mining for gold in Georgia interesting. I had to check back to see where the story was taking place as I thought it was Georgia, but then I thought we skipped to California. Nope, it was gold mining in Georgia, the land being taken away from the Cherokee and men winning lotteries to settle and mine for gold. This was something new to me, a bit of history I learned.
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 Denise
A Gold Rush…in Georgia?
Celebrate Lit Blog Post for The Songbird and the Surveyor by Denise Farnsworth
(writing as Denise Weimer)
Did you know there was a gold rush in Georgia that began twenty years before gold was discovered in California? That Georgia gold was purer than any found in the country? Comment below if you did. And I tip my hat to you. I come across many native Georgians who are unaware of this major event in their state’s history.
My first series, The Georgia Gold Series, touched on the Georgia Gold Rush. In the ten years since its release, I’ve written novels set between the Revolutionary War and contemporary times. (I also recently got married. Thus, the name change from Denise Weimer to Denise Farnsworth. I hope you’ll look for my future novels under my new name!) The period of the 1830s is one largely untouched in American history by fiction writers. I always knew I might revisit that decade in more detail. Thus, The Twenty-Niners of the Georgia Gold Rush was born.
Gold was first discovered by white men on Coker Creek in 1827, but it wasn’t until fall of 1828, when Benjamin Parks found a nugget as he returned from filling his cattle’s lick log west of the Chestatee River, that the mining industry exploded in North Georgia. The area was flooded by prospectors who clashed with the native Cherokee people. The land was soon taken from them and divvied up in a lottery of ninety-two districts, with farming plots set at a hundred and sixty acres and gold lots at forty acres. By June of 1832, almost six hundred surveyors from across Georgia were hard at work.
The gold belt stretched from Clarkesville to Canton (the setting of book two), with major concentrations near Dahlonega (the setting of book three). Auraria, located on the mountain ridge between the Etowah and Chestatee rivers, was one of the boom towns that lingered into the twentieth century, although now only a few abandoned buildings remain. Think Wild West before the west went wild. Into this setting I dropped the story of a guilt-haunted surveyor with a dangerous streak of wanderlust and an orphan who’s learned to sing for her life.
Genevieve Gillbard’s neglectful father has died and left her in the care of her guardian, a volatile saloon owner with unwholesome intentions. When she overhears a plot that implicates Charles Martin and one of his employees in a scheme to kidnap her and siphon off a local miner’s gold, Genevieve flees…right into the arms of another man she surely can’t trust.
Blaming himself for the death of his wife, Jesse Holden wants nothing less than being saddled with the wounded songbird he rescued from a drunken miner on his first trip to Auraria. But when he learns that Genny’s guardian is the same man responsible for his wife’s death, he agrees to shelter her to give his sheriff friend, also his former brother-in-law, time to entrap Charles. Neither of them expect to be forced into a marriage in name only—at least until Genny reaches her majority. Despite his efforts to hold his heart at bay, Jesse was raised by his minister-father to treat women right—something so new to Genny, it crumbles her walls. But will the emotional price of trusting Jesse prove higher than the risk to her physical safety?
Although set near raucous boom town of Auraria, The Songbird and the Surveyor is a story of quiet healing and second chances. Of rescues and God’s miraculous redirection. Of learning to spot the real among the counterfeit…and hold onto it for all you’re worth.
Blog Stops
Debbie’s
Dusty Deliberations, November 14
Truth and Grace
Homeschool Academy, November 15
Blossoms
and Blessings, November 15
Texas Book-aholic,
November 16
lakesidelivingsite,
November 17
For Him and My
Family, November 18
Babbling Becky L’s Book
Impressions, November 19
Pause for
Tales, November 19
Abba’s
Prayer Warrior Princess, November 20
Happily
Managing a Household of Boys, November 21
Stories By Gina,
November 22 (Author Interview)
Lyssa
Loves Books, November 22
Devoted To Hope,
November 23
Books
You Can Feel Good About, November 24
Books
Less Travelled, November 25
Holly’s Book
Corner, November 26
The Mommies
Reviews, November 26
Cover
Lover Book Review, November 27
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Denise is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Amazon Gift Card!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/3d5a4/the-songbird-and-the-surveyor-celebration-tour-giveaway
This sounds like a story that keeps moving, no dull moments.
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a great book!
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