Bitterness, a stalker, and a neighbor to die for. What’s a girl to do? Trailed by a stalker in New York City, Willow Thomas, a young ad executive, scurries back to her small North Carolina hometown and the lake house where ten years earlier a scandal revealed her entire life had been a lie, and a seed of bitterness took root in her soul. The cocoon of safety Willow feels upon her arrival home soon unravels when she meets opposition from her family, faces the man she left behind, and the stalker reveals he is close on her heels. Can Willow learn to trust God to tear out her roots of resentment, reunite her family, ferret out a deadly stalker, and to rekindle the love she left behind?
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Sexual Content - 1/5
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Violence - 2/5
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Language - 0/5
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Drugs and Alcohol - 0/5
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Summary
Overall Stalking Willow is both suspenseful and thoughtful. Willow has a stalker who has started escalating. This sends her back to her small North Carolina
hometown. You learn that ten years earlier she left after a scandal revealed her whole life had been a lie. Willow doesn’t realize how bitter she has become
until she returns and starts to see herself turning into her Aunt Agatha. Stalking Willow is bursting with remarkable characters, unrelenting suspense,
and a lesson or two from Granny. Willow is a character you will cheer on as she tries to find her future. Quentin is the hero that has waiting ten years for his
princess to return. I enjoyed how the author showed the differences in Quentin and Willow’s relationship/ interactions compared to Laurel and Darrell. I
recommend Stalking Willow and look forward to reading more books by this author.
Violence There are some deaths. The storyline is dealing with a stalker.
Language
Sexual Kissing, hugging,