Michelle Griep

View Original

Mountain Laurel

A Journey to the American Frontier

To be honest, I haven’t actually read this one…yet! I’m chomping at the bit to snatch it off my TBR pile, though, and squirrel myself away for a few days to immerse myself in Lori Benton’s magical writing. And I have great expectations that Mountain Laurel will be outstanding in prose and storyline, not to mention it’s the first in a trilogy so yeehaw! I won’t have to say goodbye to the characters I know I’ll fall in love with. Here’s a blurb:

North Carolina, 1793
Ian Cameron, a Boston cabinetmaker turned frontier trapper, has come to Mountain Laurel hoping to remake himself yet again―into his planter uncle’s heir. No matter how uneasily the role of slave owner rests upon his shoulders. Then he meets Seona―beautiful, artistic, and enslaved to his kin.

Seona has a secret: she’s been drawing for years, ever since that day she picked up a broken slate to sketch a portrait. When Ian catches her at it, he offers her opportunity to let her talent flourish, still secretly, in his cabinetmaking shop. Taking a frightening leap of faith, Seona puts her trust in Ian. A trust that leads to a deeper, more complicated bond.

As fascination with Seona turns to love, Ian can no longer be the man others have wished him to be. Though his own heart might prove just as untrustworthy a guide, he cannot simply walk away from those his kin enslaves. With more lives than his and Seona’s in the balance, the path Ian chooses now will set the course for generations of Camerons to come.

A story of choice and consequence, of bondage and freedom, of faith and family.