Showing posts with label Valerie Bodden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Valerie Bodden. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

“Not Until This Day” by Valerie Bodden


Isabel has been on the run with her young daughter Gabby for three years. She’s running from her abusive and controlling ex-husband. She lands in the town of Hope Springs and finds out that the apartment she thought she rented doesn’t accept pets, like Gabby’s dog. They spend the night in the car; Isabel is nearly at her wit’s end.

Tyler is raising 10-year-old twin boys on his own; his wife left him (and the boys) for another man when the twins were small. His brother and sister-in-law keep suggesting dates, but Tyler is not interested in dating anyone; the hurt runs too deep. 

Valerie Bodden
Tyler first meets Isabel the morning after the sleep-in-the-car “adventure.” It’s not a good experience; he things she might be involved with drugs. That same day, Isabel walks into a job with Tyler’s sister-in-law. Tyler stays suspicious, but soon finds himself in what he thought would ever happen again – an attraction to a woman, and a non-believing woman at that. Trust begins to build, Isabel begins to find faith – and then the ex-husband shows up. Everything begins to unravel when Tyler learns Isabel isn’t who she claimed to be, and her name isn’t even Isabel.

Trust, hope, and forgiveness are the themes of Not Until This Day by Valerie Bodden, one of five novels in Bodden’s “Not Until” series. The others include Not Until ForeverNot Until This MomentNot Until YouNot Until Us, and the short story Not Until Christmas Morning. Bodden, a pastor’s wife, lives with her family in Wisconsin.

Not Until This Day is an engaging, heartwarming story about two people afraid of second chances and learning how to forgive and trust.

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Monday, January 6, 2020

The (Christmas) Romantic in All of Us


In December, I went on a romance reading binge – some 15 novels and novellas about romance during the Christmas season. A friend on Facebook asked, “Why?” I started with two reasons:

First, I had somehow ended up with a lot of these books on Kindle. Some were inexpensive, some were free, some looked interesting. But I had a pile of Christmas romance stories, and I decided I could do something with them.

Second, the stories were research. I’m reaching the end of my final draft of Novel #5, and it includes a bit of romance. I particularly wanted to understand how romance novels describe women’s reactions and responses. The stories on my Kindle provided a lot of research material.

While it wasn’t a point of my reading, something else happened along the way. I learned some things, about romance stories and myself. 

Romance stories tend to fall into categories. In my blog posts, I sorted them by the various categories I found: wishes and hopes, coming home (and its closely associated category of a prodigal returning home), disappointment (in love or career), regional stories that lean heavily on a particular location, food (whole novels built around food), second chances, and ghosts (at least at Christmas time). My experience with romance stories at other times suggests it’s not just a Christmas thing, except for the ghosts.

How romance stories treat Christmas, and religion in general, depends largely upon whether they are “Christian” or “secular” fiction. In the stories I’ve read, very few Christian writers go heavy on the faith angles, instead allowing the subject to play out naturally in the story. Interestingly enough, secular writers have more trouble with stories based at Christmas; they have to focus more on the season’s feelings or family gatherings, or old traditions. If a church is involved, it’s usually the Christmas program. Or they skip church entirely and focus on community celebrations or decorating contests.

What romance stories seem to share in common is how much smells, tastes, and lips are involved in women’s reactions and responses. Some writers apply these to men’s responses as well, but it seems rather forced. Touch is also important, and fingers touching a hand on an arm inevitably sends electric-like shocks up the recipient’s arm.

Romance stories are not pretentious. They don’t try to be anything except what they are – stories. They’re not claiming to be great literature with profound themes. They are simply telling a story. Like any other kind of story, you can learn things about yourself and others from a romance. But no one, including the author, expects a romance story to be nominated for a great literary prize.

Romances also invariably have happy endings. We want the characters to overcome problems, disabilities, history, disappointment, rejection, or whatever. We want to see love triumph. We want to see the good guys win. 

Of all the Christmas romances I read in the last month, two really stood out, both by Christian authors. Both stories delivered more than expected. One was Not Until Christmas Morning by Valerie Bodden, and the other was One Christmas Eve by Robin Patchen. Both involve strong male characters wounded or broken in some way, women struggling to make a way for themselves, and (interestingly enough) wayward teens. To be fair to all the other stories I read, both of these stories connected strongly to the novel I’m working on, which involved a father’s relationship with his son. 

All of these stories reminded me of something else. All of us have a bit of romance in us, even the most hardnosed, clueless, and pigheaded of us men. I believe it’s hardwired into us. But that’s another (romance) story.

Top photograph by Heather Mount via Unsplash. Used with permission.

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Christmas, Romance, and Prodigals


We love our prodigals!

The return of the prodigal, or a character behaving like a prodigal, is one of the common themes of romance stories. And in Christmas romance stories as well. 

The prodigal is usually, but not always, a son, a father, a boyfriend, a brother – a male. He returns home after an extended absence, upending all kinds of former relationships. He may be healed, with no one still trusting him, or he may still be broken, with the healing to come. Sometimes the story is a retelling of the parable spoken by Jesus in the Gospel of Luke. Sometimes it’s a story inspired by the parable but not bearing much connection to it. 

Prodigal stories do share one primary characteristic – the prodigal returns home and fines forgiveness, redemption, and sometimes love (eventually).

Not Until Christmas Morning by Valerie Bodden

Austin Hart is a bitter young man. He’s working himself physically, trying to recover from an IED attack in Afghanistan. The attack killed his best friend and an 11-year-old boy the unit had adopted. And Austin lost his foot and part of his leg. He’s determined to physically train himself so he can return to his unit, but the odds are stacked against him.

In addition to his foot, Austin lost his faith. God simply wouldn’t allow that kind of death and destruction, so there must be no God. Austin’s brother Chad is still stationed in Afghanistan and talks with him weekly. Chad knows his brother is struggling.

Auston decides to return to Hope Springs, the town where he and his brother were born and spent part of their childhood years. He rents a house next door to Leah, an early 30-something who has decided God wants her to be single and has taken on the biggest project of her life – 12-year-old Jackson, a foster child who’s bounced around nine different foster homes, stays in trouble in school, and is determined not to love anyone. 

Austin becomes the connecting link between the boy and Leah, and Leah and Austin both discover romantic connections developing between them. But Austin still struggles with his anger and bitterness, and Leah, having been hurt once in romance, is resisting the idea of romance. 

Not Until Christmas Morningpart of the Hope Springs series by Valerie Bodden, is a well-done, moving story of three broken people circling each other, each afraid to touch and afraid to be touched. 

A Christmas Homecoming by MaryAnn Diorio

Seven years before, Sonia and Rick Pettit’s daughter Jody left home, disappearing without a trace. She left behind her parents and her brother Ben. Rick was devastated by his daughter’s abandonment and eventually died of what was officially heart disease but was really from what the doctor called a broken heart. Ben has been embittered by his sister’s desertion of the family, and he’s increasingly finding solace in alcohol. 

Sonia keeps praying for her daughter’s return, as impossible as it seems. No one knows whether Jody is alive or dead; a private investigator hired by the family found no trace of her, anywhere.

Jody, however, is very much alive and living in Australia. She’s a divorced mom of twins, struggling to keep her job in a difficult economy and provide for her children. She deeply regrets abandoning her family. When she loses her job in a bankruptcy right before Christmas, she decides to use what little savings she has to return home to Virginia in the United States. But it won’t be the homecoming she hopes for.

A Christmas Homecoming by MaryAnn Diorio is a retelling of the Biblical parable, with a daughter taking the place of the prodigal son. We watch a family come to grips with loss, hurt, and pain as they struggle to find hope and forgiveness.


Everybody Loves Mickey by Therese Travis

Fireman Mickey Hurst was at one time much like a prodigal, but he’s found faith, reformed, and works hard as a volunteer at his church. People at the church love Mickey, except for Aubrey Thomas, who works in the church office. Years before, Aubrey was the recipient of a drunken pass by Mickey, which was made worse by his apology, which sounded a lot like “I’d have to be drunk to try to kiss you.” What Mickey meant was something else entirely, but Aubrey allowed his words to steel her heart.

For his part, Mickey knows he’s love with Aubrey and has been for years. But her ongoing hostility prevents him from trying to take the relationship any further. As a church volunteer, he sees Aubrey almost every day, and he does his best to dodge the arrows she tosses at him with words, auctions, and attitudes.

Everyone else at the church sees the obvious – the two are meant for each other. And so a loose conspiracy of matchmaking is born, beginning with the choir director asking Mickey and Aubrey to sing a duet for the church’s Christmas program.

Everybody Loves Mickey by Therese Davis tells the story of Mickey and Aubrey, a story of walls between people gradually coming down. It’s a story about missed communications, past hurts and disappointments, and (we hope) love.

Photograph by Josh Harrison via Unsplash, Used with permission.