About the Book
Book: Written in Ink
Author: Sara Davison
Genre: Romantic Suspense
Release date: August 4, 2021
Everything he has built his life and future on has been torn away.
Cash McCall has loved Dr. Renee Dawson for half his life. Although they’ve talked about a future together, she has never believed it was the right time for them to get engaged. Now she has ended their relationship, and he has no idea why.
Everything Renee worked so hard for is in jeopardy. One agonizing decision has changed everything, and she has been forced to shatter the heart of the man she loves. And her own.
The extremist militant group The Arm is on a mission. Its leader doesn’t care how many innocent lives are lost in the pursuit of the group’s end goal, and Renee has seen something she was not supposed to see.
If Cash can’t get to her in time, Renee could end up in the crosshairs of the terrorists, and he may lose her—and any chance at the life he’d always envisioned—forever.
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"Written in Ink" by Sara Davison is a story portraying God’s redemptive work in people's lives. This is a story about the lasting efforts of abortion.
Sara Davison is the author of three romantic suspense series—The Seven Trilogy, The Night Guardians, and The Rose Tattoo Trilogy, as well as the standalone, The Watcher. She has been a finalist for more than a dozen national writing awards, including Best New Canadian Christian author, a Carol, two Selahs, a Holt Medallion, and three Daphne du Maurier Awards for Excellence in Mystery/Suspense. She is a Word and Cascade Award winner. She currently resides in Ontario, Canada with her husband Michael and their three children. The words on the mug she uses every morning pretty much sum up her life—I just want to sleep, drink coffee, and make stuff up. Get to know Sara better at www.saradavison.organd @sarajdavison.
More from Sara
The Rose Tattoo Trilogy is set in one of my favourite small towns in Canada—Elora, Ontario. It was such a joy to develop the setting in this series, describing the quaint shops and the natural beauty of the gorge, places I have wandered through countless times. In the first two books of the series—Lost Down Deepand Written in Ink—the real-life fifty-nine stone steps built into the hillside and leading down to the river that runs through the gorge plays a big part in the story, as reflected in this excerpt:
The fifty-nine stone steps set into the side of the hill felt like twice that many as Cash descended slowly into the ravine.
The Elora Gorge was a natural wonder, with a steep rock face flanking both sides of a narrow river. The beauty of it was lost on him, though, and had been for five years, since the night his sister Tessa had traipsed down these stairs and onto the ice. Ice that had shattered beneath her feet, allowing the frigid river to steal her from them forever. Simply being here now drove daggers as sharp as those shards of ice into his chest. How did Jude deal with it when he’d been the one who had lingered at the top of the steps, too tired after a long day to go after her in the cold and dark, until he’d heard the ice crack and his sister scream?
By then it had been too late.
Below is a photo of the actual steps down to the river. I have been up and down those steps many times, and while they aren’t that easy to traverse (especially the going up part!) the effort is well worth it when you reach the bottom and find yourself surrounded by beauty, as Cash does here.
A cool spring breeze brushed across his cheeks. High up in one of the trees, roots clinging, against all odds, to fissures halfway up the rock across the water from him, an owl hooted, the sound drifting across the ravine. Moonlight glinted off the water, sending sparks of light skittering across the surface. Cash scanned the gorge. As far as he could see in either direction, the beauty of the night, of this place, filled his senses.
Something flowed through him like the water passing between the rocky banks. Cash withdrew one hand from his pocket and held it to his chest. What was that? He struggled to put a name to it. Peace, maybe?
Personally, the Elora Gorge has always been a place of peace for me, as it is for Cash in Written in Ink. Do you have a place you go when you need to get away from the chaos of life and experience peace?
Blog Stops
Book Reviews From an Avid Reader, October 23
Library Lady’s Kid Lit, October 23
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, October 24
Inklings and notions, October 25
An Author’s Take, October 25
Texas Book-aholic, October 26
CarpeDiem, October 27
For Him and My Family, October 27
Locks, Hooks and Books, October 28
deb’s Book Review, October 29
The Sacred Line, October 29
Ashley’s Clean Book Reviews, October 30
Happily Managing a Household of Boys, October 30
Because I said so — and other adventures in Parenting, October 31
A Modern Day Fairy Tale, November 1
Life, love, writing , November 1
Musings of a Sassy Bookish Mama, November 2
The Meanderings of a Bookworm, November 3
Vicarious Living, November 3
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, November 4
Sodbuster Living, November 5
Mary Hake, November 5
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Sara is giving away the grand prize package of a $50 Amazon card, a paperback copy of Written in Ink, a pair of rose earrings, and a pack of temporary rose tattoos!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/126b5/written-in-ink-celebration-tour-giveaway
Sounds like a great book.
ReplyDeleteI must read this one. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteYour book sounds like a great read, Sara! Thanks for sharing it with me and good luck with your book! Thanks for sharing your review, Debbie!
ReplyDeleteI am going to see if my library has this book. It sounds great.
ReplyDeleteThis book is different from my usual reads, but it sounds like a riveting story with an important message.
ReplyDeleteGood book for fall reading.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the contest.