Honor and Redemption Honor and Redemption

Honor and Redemption

    • 5.0 • 1 Rating
    • $9.99

    • $9.99

Publisher Description

A childhood love longing to make amends. A daughter fighting to break free. A mother struggling to protect her. Tormented by the past, can they build a better future?

Six years ago, tragedy tore Eloise and Patrick apart. Shouldering the burden of his brother’s death, he spent years drinking himself into oblivion. Now freed from that darkness, Patrick Lennox returns to reclaim the heart of the young lady he left behind.

Can she forgive the man who abandoned her without a word?

Eloise Andrews has enough troubles in her life without Patrick stirring things up. Her mother is a heartless beast who controls every aspect of her life, and Eloise is determined to break free of her—even if it means destroying the perfect reputation her mother is desperate to save.

But not all wounds can be seen, and perhaps something more lurks beneath her mother’s frosty demeanor…

Years of torment taught Emmeline Andrews to shield her heart behind a sterling reputation, and she will do everything she can to ensure her children are protected against society’s cruelty. But with her daughter determined to ruin herself and Emmeline’s own marriage crumbling to pieces, she has to decide whether or not that precious reputation is a shield or a jail.

Jumping between two generations, Honor and Redemption is a story about how our mistakes can shape our world and how the bond between mother and daughter, friends and sweethearts can break when we are afraid to open our hearts.

GENRE
Romance
NARRATOR
MB
Madeleine Brolly
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
09:19
hr min
RELEASED
2021
December 16
PUBLISHER
Nichols Publishing, LLC
SIZE
404.3
MB

Customer Reviews

Crysvio ,

Wonderful book and narrator

Regency romance has certain elements you expect in each story, mis. Nichols broke this tradition. First, we have a villain for a second heroine along with her background and how she became one. Then, we have the ugly side of every community in every time period, regency had these, but authors mostly avoid them. Mis. Nichols portrayed this ugliness perfectly, including a scene that I didn’t like. Among the characters, I felt and loved Norman, he was written brilliantly making him the hero of this story (for me at least).