36/50 Gerard by L. L. Muir
37/50 Liam by Diane Darcy
38/50 Kennedy by L. L. Muir
These three were a continuation of the Ghosts of Culloden Moor series. Same plot that they are given a chance to do a good deed and leave the moor.
39/50 When Night Comes by Dan Walsh
Read this after reading someone's review. Great book and really enjoyed it so much that I read
40/50 Remembering Dresden by Dan Walsh The second book in the Jack Turner series. Synopsis is again from
Amazon.
Young history professor, Jack Turner, takes a retreat at a lakeside cabin just outside of Culpepper, Georgia to work on his doctoral dissertation. The cabin is owned by an ambitious state senator, an inheritance from his father. Inside, everything is exactly the way it was when the old man died ten years ago. While taking a break from his research, Jack snoops through the father’s books and finds an old photo album filled with black-and-white pictures of orphaned children. Intrigued, he continues searching and finds what appears to be evidence of murder and an old leather journal, handwritten entirely in German. Rachel Cook, Jack’s girlfriend, translates the journal for him. What it reveals instantly puts both of their lives in mortal danger.
41/50 Unintended Consequences by Dan Walsh Book 3 in the series
Jack and Rachel leave Culpepper for their long-awaited honeymoon trip, a driving tour through New England. On day three, they stop at a little bayside town in Cape Cod to visit Jack’s grandmother. After he gets called away to handle an emergency, Rachel stays and listens as Jack’s grandmother shares a remarkable story about how she and Jack’s grandfather met in the early days of World War 2. It’s a story filled with danger, decades-old family secrets, daring rescues and romance. Jack is named after his grandfather, and this story set the course and direction for Jack’s life to the present day. After hearing it, Rachel is amazed that anyone survived.
42/50 Ten Thousand Sorrows by Elizabeth Kim
This is the story of a Korean War child. Her mother is killed by her family for having a mixed race and out of wedlock child. She is taken to an orphanage where she is eventually adopted by a fundamentalist Christian family. She never fits in Korea for being to American and she never really fits in America for being to Asian. It's a story of a woman trying to find herself in a world where she feels she doesn't truly fit.
This book was fascinating and horrifying. Elizabeth Kim went through so much to eventually try and find her place in the world and some peace.