I've been on a WWII-set romance kick since last winter. I blazed through all of Sarah Sundin's novels that are set in WWII and then started looking for more. Bretton's first book in the "Home Front" series opens in 1943 and follows the Wilson family: patriarch Tom Wilson is off to war, leaving his wife and two daughters, Cathy and Nancy, behind. But a year later, Johnny Danza, a soldier in Tom's platoon, shows up injured and nearly unconscious on the Wilson's doorstep. As Cathy nurses Johnny back to health, they grow closer each day.
I thought "Sentimental Journey" started off strong, but came to a rushed and unsatisfying conclusion. For much of this book, there is no conflict between the main characters (Cathy and Johnny). When the inevitable conflict does come, it's at the very end of the book and is solved in half a chapter. Additionally, I just didn't care for Johnny that much. He is a man of his era who wants a wife who "lives for her husband" (yep, actual quote from the book). Sure, he comes around to appreciate Cathy's work ethic and personhood in the end, but it happens so quickly it rings false. Perhaps Bretton's follow-up, 'Stranger in Paradise", is better since it has a slightly older hero and heroine, not the naive, doe-eyed early 20-somethings of "Sentimental Journey".