The Key to Love, by Betsy St. Amant, 2020, Revell (Baker Publishing)

What does Romance have to do with Love, anyway?

I chose The Key to Love because I wanted to read a light romance as a get-away from tough times this year. Thank you, Revell, for choosing me as a reviewer and sending me a copy.

The title and cover promise a sweet love story, with pink and black and a bakery window full of French pasteries. I hoped perhaps this novel would even take me to Paris and I might get a recipe for macarons. But no, the story stays in a town called Story in the heart of rural America.

The Key to Love, by Betsy St. Amant

St. Amant presents us with a taste of Americanized ‘French’ romance. The main character has a French name, as does her love interest. Born and raised in this little American town, she is devoted to it and her career as a French pastry chef in the footsteps of her mother. Her mother had gone to Paris to learn this skill many years ago. The book makes me want to eat petit fours and travel to Paris. The protagonist does eventually get there but disappointingly we readers don’t go with her.

Down-home, messy realities

You will like The Key to Love if you get off on non-stop sarcasm and bickering. To give them credit, the main characters consciously attempt to overcome these habits. However, it takes at least the first half of the book for them to climb out of their rut. Hope exists, though, and there is light at the end of the tunnel.

There is lots of homey humour, and love is seen through acceptance of reality rather than holding out for the imaginary dreamy version. I just wish, as an honest reviewer, that the first two-thirds of the story could have been shortened and the last third developed more. It’s not until the end that we get some more serious thoughts about the real keys to love.

What was the mother’s story?

Some intriguing mysterious threads are only loosely tied up in the end. I hope St. Amant will write a sequel taking readers to Paris with the protagonist. She might research the history of her mother’s time there. Perhaps we could meet the legendary photographer she knew. The author could take us to the places mentioned in The Key to Love and look into the mysteries that she has enticed us with.

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The Forgiving Jar, by Wanda E. Brunstetter, 2019, Shiloh Run Press (Barbour Publishing Inc.)

The Prayer Jars, Book Two
The Forgiving Jar

The Forgiving Jar is a novel about a young woman whose mother has recently passed away. In her mother’s Bible, she finds a note about her mother’s parents, who she never knew. She learns that they are Amish, and she goes to meet them and live with them for a period of time.

The main character, Sara, is not a Christian at the outset of the novel. She cannot find it in her heart to forgive. But she finds a jar full of thoughts and verses on little slips of paper. Intrigued by these notes, she reads a few when she finds herself in need of encouragement. Some of the notes are about forgiving. Why is forgiving so important anyway?

The Forgiving Jar is second in a series, but I read it as a standalone and didn’t need to read the first book to understand the story. I enjoyed it very much, and will read more of Wanda Brunstetter’s books. I learned some things about the Amish community and their gentle ways, and the Strasburg area in Pennsylvania where the novel is set. The book makes me want to visit the area–maybe sometime for a holiday.

The characters in the novel are all likeable. Some are Amish and some are not. We see how they interact with each other. Sara meets a young man who is studying to become a pastor. She isn’t a Christian, but he is so nice. Will their relationship be able to grow? You’ll have to read it yourself to find out.

To learn more about the author, visit www.wandabrunstetter.com.