On the surface, Whitney Powell is happy working with her sled dogs and welcoming the new additions to her family through her sisters' marriages and an upcoming birth. But her life is full of complications, including an estranged father, that have her on the edge of losing control. Growing up, she was the strong sister, and she can't give that up now. When some villagers in outlying areas come down with a horrible sickness, Dr. Peter Cameron turns to Whitney and her dogs for help navigating the deep snow, and they become close traveling to minister to the sick together. Peter quickly recognizes her finer qualities but also notices her troubling way of coping with her struggles. He does what he can to help but questions if she is more of a risk than his heart can take. As sickness spreads throughout Nome and another man courts Whitney, she and Peter will discover that sometimes it is only in weakness that you can find strength.
. . . Peterson and Woodhouse do an excellent job of creating heroes and heroines to root for, as well as evil con men Maddy meets through the circus. This is an exciting and thoughtful portrait of family and faith on the frontier.
John Roselli heads to Nome on a mission. On his deathbed, John's grandfather asked him to deliver a box to Chuck Bundrant. This is no small task and will cost everything he has, but John is determined to honor his grandfather's wishes.
With the loss of her first true love, Carolina Adams finds life at the family plantation nearly unbearable.
Peterson's vivid writing enlivens this pioneer saga of the Chadwicks and Selbys as they endure devastating losses and find unexpected joys.
“I want a man who looks like Horatio and who'll treat me the way he did Rosalind.” The fictional hero had been almost too good to be true, but that hadn't stopped Opal from dreaming about him. Now the man of Opal's dreams was standing ...
"Prodigal sons learn valuable lessons in the pleasing second installment of Peterson's Ladies of the Lake series. . . .This feel-good story will delight fans of faith-filled historical romance."--Publishers Weekly
Ever so slowly Dakota Territory is being transformed from a vast prairie into rich farmland.
This stunning debut novel by Kelly Eileen Hake is full of wit and warmth.
Pressed by the FBI and CIA to provide evidence of Barringston's illegal activity, David O'Neal finds himself in a maelstrom of danger and intrigue in this story about one man who will stop at nothing—not even violence—to reach his goal. ...
"a historical romance about a determined young naturalist resolved to work in the dazzling-but-untamed Mount Rainier National Park in 1927"--