AAHHHHHHHHHHHHH I ADORED THIS!!!!!! 😭 My heart!!! I literally read this twice in a row, it was that good, and it's won a place on my mental favorite-books-ever list.
Since finishing this, I've also read her novella Inn for a Surprise, plus Full Steam Ahead, and what I'm learning is that I'll automatically love anything Karen Witemeyer writes. Her style is impeccable. From what I've read by her, she has the most gloriously imperfect and lovable, realistically mature characters, delightful humor, romance that turns one into butter, captivating plots with the most squeal-inducingly amusing of situations, poignant, tear-jerking moments, and strong, Biblical themes. *sighs* How? How does she do it???
Anyway, this was the first book of hers that I read, and it was no exception.
I could rant all day about how much I loved Jericho Tucker and Hannah Richards. All. Day. I loved how no-nonsense and practical Jericho was, clashing with the innate love of beauty Hannah possessed (although man, that girl was simultaneously so industrious and resourceful! SUCH a noble, inspiring heroine!), and the journey of them learning from each other, and discovering what the Bible says about both sides of the issue, was just lovely, and so well written. But I'm short on time right now, so I guess you'll just have to read the book for yourself! I hope you'll like it half as much as I did! ;) Oh, and do read the book with a cup of hot chocolate!
(Writerly side note: my excuse for reading it the second time was that I'm writing a story about a shop-owning seamstress myself [cue me gasping with pure joy when I realized that would become Hannah's occupation - and that she'd actually live in the room above her shop, no less!], and the story was so chock full with realistic, seamless - no pun intended - information about it that I literally went through and made a list of all the technical details regarding the layout of the shop and sewing process to help me visualize my heroine's situation. Research work, you know? Just...very fun research. XD And no, before you start frowning, I promise I'm NOT revamping my WIP to become a carbon copy of A Tailor-Made Bride; they're very different stories. It was simply some much-needed inspiration that gave me more ideas on how to devise a truly unique, yet realistic scenario for my own heroine. Wow. I don't think I've ever used italics this much in a review.)