Living in a cabin she inherited from her single, self-reliant Great Aunt Emma after her husband leaves her, Allison comes to terms with her grief, but when she finds a wedding dress and journals in Emma’s attic, Allison discovers Emma was surprisingly like herself.
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Sexual Content - 1/5
1/5
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Violence - 1/5
1/5
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Language - 0/5
0/5
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Drugs and Alcohol - 1/5
1/5
Summary
Robin Lee Hatcher has taken a painful personal experience and turned it into a brilliant testimonial story. Honestly, I was not prepared. It is magnificent from beginning to end. When Allison Kavanagh moves into her deceased great aunt's mountain cabin, she is beginning a new chapter in her life. Recently divorced from a man that she trully loved for years, in spite of his battle with alcohol, has left her empty in spirit and hopeful for emotional recovery. A cozy new home, a friendly small town, wonderful new friends and time . . . . just what Allison seems to need. Upon exploring her aunt's attic however, Allison is introduced to numerous facts about her beloved aunt that were never mentioned out loud, only written in the pages of her numerous journals Craving more of Aunt Emma's story leads Allison to believe that she and her aunt shared more in common than she dreamed possible. And somewhere along the way, Allison discovers that God has been keeping His promises after all. This is a book that belongs on every shelf.
Violence: There is one domestic violence scene with few graphic details.
Sexual: Extremely clean book. Only one mention of an adulterous affair, but no descriptions.
Drug & Alcohol: Alcoholism is central theme in the book, but in the recovery stage.