I received a copy of Hope Springs by Kim Tate from Booksneeze in exchange for an honest review.
In a small Southern community where everyone is holding tight to something,
the biggest challenge may be learning to let go.
Hope Springs, North Carolina, is the epitome of small town life—a place
filled with quiet streets where families have been friends for generations, a
place where there’s not a lot of change. Until three women suddenly find
themselves planted there for a season.
Janelle Evans hasn’t gone back to Hope Springs for family reunions since
losing her husband. But when she arrives for Christmas and learns that her
grandmother is gravely ill, she decides to extend the stay. It isn’t long before
she runs into her first love, and feelings that have been dormant for more than
a decade are reawakened. And when Janelle proposes a Bible study a the local
diner--and invites both African American and Caucasian women she has met--the
group quickly forms a spiritual bond . . . and inadvertently adds to underlying
tension in the community.
Becca Anderson is finally on the trajectory she’s longed for. Having been in
the ministry trenches for years, she’s been recruited as the newest speaker of a
large Christian women’s conference. But her husband feels called to become the
pastor of his late father’s church in Hope Springs. Will small town living
affect her big ministry dreams?
And Stephanie London has the ideal life—married to a doctor in St. Louis with
absolutely nothing she has to do. When her cousin Janelle volunteers to stay in
Hope Springs and care for their grandmother, she feels strangely compelled to do
the same. It’s a decision that will forever change her.
As these women come together, facing disappointments both public and private,
they soon recognize that healing is needed in their hearts, their families, and
their churches that have long been divided along racial lines. God's plan for
them in Hope Springs—and for Hope Springs itself—is bigger than they ever
imagined.
I'm not a big fiction reader but this was a good book. It showed how God can work in many different people's lives. The women all learned to follow God's calling for each of them and the town was a much better place because of it.
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