Enjoy the latest and greatest in Christian Women’s Fiction!
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The Faded Photo
by Sarah Price
When Frances receives a devastating diagnosis of breast cancer, she faces the challenges alone . . . until friendship and love offer hope for the future.
Looking Glass Lies
by Varina Denman
Since the bombing, Autumn lives each day as a guilt-ridden survivor, shadowing the lives of the victims and asking the heartrending question, Why?
Retreating from life into a fictional world of her own creation, novelist Melanie Vander finds comfort and direction through her characters . . . who may just lead her permanently from reality.
The Memory of You
by Catherine West
Haunted by the loss of her twin sister, Natalie returns years later to the family winery, where she will either overcome or be overcome by the past.
Since You’ve Been Gone
by Christa Allan
When Olivia starts receiving letters written by her fiancé before his death, she must confront a disturbing question: Can we ever know anyone fully, even someone we love?
Where My Heart Belongs
by Tracie Peterson
Will two sisters be able to bridge twelve years of resentment and heartache to discover a future of hope and healing together?
Shades of Light
by Melody Carlson
When her only child leaves home for college, widowed Gwen Sullivan discovers just how lonely an empty nest can be. How will she adjust and fill her empty days?
The bruises that can’t be seen are the most painful of all. When Penny’s abusive new husband allows her to take a job cleaning houses, she meets two women from very different worlds who teach her to live and laugh again.
Longing
by Karen Kingsbury
Neither one can forget the other, and yet they’re both moving on–trying to get over a deep and persistent longing. Their love for each other is lost to the past. Or is it?
A Watershed Year
by Susan Schoenberger
Lucy never confessed her love to her best friend before he passed away, and she’s haunted by the power of things left unsaid. But then she receives the first of his e-mails arranged to be sent after his death . . .