Before I delve into my feelings about this book, I feel I should preface this with the fact that I read this as an assignment. At the library where I work, every year we are assigned different reading tasks, which we have dubbed CORE, in order to make sure our reference work is well balanced. This year, I had to pick two titles outside of my comfort zone. Anything in the Inspirational section is outside my comfort zone, and I'm not huge on crime fiction, so this fit quite well. It was not a horrible read. I've definitely suffered worse. Just not my cup of tea; so, even if this book is awesome for other people, it wasn't going to get a high rating from me to begin with. All things considered, giving this a 2 is a good grade. Now, onward.
... CHEESE. So much cheese. Even with clean fiction, I feel authors do not need to pepper their stories with excessively cheesy dialogue and awkward phrases. I could be okay with it if the characters were introduced as having a particular quirk in that fashion, or if the area had a certain dialect. Neither of those situations were presented to me, so I was left a tad baffled by the author's choice of many words. Maddie and Chris, our protagonists, are introduced as late twenty-somethings. However, by how they talk, I would have guessed late thirties to forty easy. I'm 26, and I have never heard someone my age use such phrasing. "Happier than a mustang in high grass." "Don't count your chickadees before they hatch, buckaroo." Are these people ranchers? Nope. And Chris is often enough described with laugh lines around his eyes. How much have you been smiling that you have crow's feet before you're 30? I just think the author was writing her age and not the age she assigned her characters. Oh, one more. Took me a minute to realize what this line was: "Come flashflood or hot place." (Just say Hell or High Water. Christian fiction can still say Hell).
Story wise, it was decent. Despite my lack of enthusiasm for the characters involved, the mystery was enjoyable. However, the confrontation was incredibly short and abrupt. Happened in the last ten minutes of the book. Lots of looking, and snooping, and researching, and then suddenly Oh! We're there! We know everything! The end. It could have been mapped out better. For the romance, please refer back to the CHEESE. It wasn't very believable for me. We are told that Maddie and Chris have a slightly saucy past, but the flashbacks are random and inconclusive. Their current interactions obviously yield attraction, but again I'm only being TOLD, not SHOWN.
Overall, for the right patron, I would recommend this book and others like it. The Love Inspired Suspense covers quite a bit of the shelves, and they are indeed popular... with the right crowd. So, if you're looking for a bit of NCIS with characters who are less developed and a tad awkward, a small evangelical lesson, and absolutely no smut (couple kisses), pick it up. Odds are, you'll like it.