Time Will Tell
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4.1 • 64 Ratings
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Publisher Description
Romance and adventure...and a trip to where an American tradition began…
Libby Edwards, a gifted horsewoman, unwittingly wishes herself back in time to Louisville, Kentucky just before Churchill Downs and the Kentucky Derby become a reality. During Libby’s journey in the past, she stumbles upon her destiny. Unfortunately, he’s in the wrong century. In 1874, there’s no electricity, no internet, no modern medicine, no antibiotics—no Starbucks! And even worse than that, women have no rights. Libby has no desire to stay.
Widower, Colin Thorpe, a renaissance man of his time, has big dreams. He is a horse breeder who names his thoroughbreds after Mythological Gods because he has a reverence for past cultures and an appreciation for the unexplainable.
Customer Reviews
Great book!
This book kept me guessing, great sense of history and romance! I loved the time travel aspect because who wouldn’t love to 😃
Poorly written smut
This is poorly written, like the author couldn’t quite keep characters in character, a meandering contrived storyline with lots of dead ends. It was just really cringy to read, Libby is pretty flaky and immature and she repeatedly realizes and forgets the same things and is generally pretty wishy-washy, except for how she is extremely physically attracted to a guy in the past (with blue or brown eyes, the author couldn’t decide apparently) and basically becomes a brain dead beet in his presence for the first half of the book, his “protective instincts” get pretty inappropriate as soon as he finds out she’s a she! If you’re into that, you might like this book. Oh yeah, Libby’s time travel is enabled by “twin oaks” which must be powered by “time travel fate” and “wish magic”, but only when she ACTUALLY wants it bad enough, and she needs to be near the trees unless she’s asleep when she’s 14.
Time will tell.
I enjoyed it from first page to last. I thought there can’t be enough pages to get to the end but there was and the ending was brilliant..