Saturday, March 10, 2018

The Innkeeper's Daughter by Michelle Griep

The Innkeeper's Daughter by [Griep, Michelle]
Here’s the book summary:
A London officer goes undercover to expose a plot against the Crown
 
Dover, England, 1808: Officer Alexander Moore goes undercover as a gambling gentleman to expose a high-stakes plot against the king—and he’s a master of disguise, for Johanna Langley believes him to be quite the rogue. . .until she can no longer fight against his unrelenting charm.
 
All Johanna wants is to keep the family inn afloat, but when the rent and the hearth payment are due at the same time, where will she find the extra funds? If she doesn’t come up with the money, there will be nowhere to go other than the workhouse—where she’ll be separated from her ailing mother and ten-year-old brother.
 
Alex desperately wants to help Johanna, especially when she confides in him, but his mission—finding and bringing to justice a traitor to the crown—must come first, or they could all end up dead.

And now, my review:
The Innkeeper’s Daughter by Michelle Griep is a very gripping story of love, loss, intrigue, danger, suspense, and a great thread of the truth that the outcome is not up to a person but up to God.  I find that Michelle is an amazing author and her books are very hard to put down.  She has so many characters in this book that have me feeling all sorts of things, either frustration or oh no or ahhh love or whatever one must feel when reading about the special Mr. Nutbrown.  This is a great historical fiction I highly recommend set in the beautiful land of England. 


I received a complimentary copy of this book from Barbour Publishing and Netgalley.  I was under no obligation to post a review.





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