Book Review: Mercy Come Morning by Lisa Tawn Bergren
"You are
an adult now, Krista. You can fight off your own predators. But the biggest one
you face is inside you. You know that, don't you?"
Krista Mueller returns to her home in New Mexico around
Christmastime to visit her dying mother who was officially diagnosed with Alzheimer’s twelve years ago, which was the last time she saw her mother when she admitted her to
Cimarron Care Center.
She carries around the ghosts of what her mother used to be, all
the bad memories and blocks out the good. She’s afraid to love and forgive.
While there, she re-meets her high school sweetheart, Dane
McConnell, a doctor there, who reminds her of what it means to love with mercy
and grace.
The first thing I noticed is that Mercy Come Morning has incredibly long chapters. Of 222 pages, it
only has 15 chapters. I found myself often stopping in the middle of scenes due
to lack of time to read instead of being able to find a good stopping point
within the next few pages.
It takes a while for this book to progress. It’s about ¾ of the
way through before the plot begins to go anywhere. There is way too much
backstory and New Mexico history thrown at you during the first half of the
book. Enter page-skimming. Because of this, I felt like I was being told a
story instead of living the story as it happened to the characters. Like a huge
part of the story happened before I joined.
If I weren’t reviewing this book I would have put it down and
started another book before I was even halfway through. But once you get past
all the history, history, and more history, a great story begins to unfold.
Author Lisa Tawn Bergren weaves in the magic of Christmas with the miracle of
giving second chances.
Needless to say, Dane and Krista fall in love and Krista finds
reconciliation with her mother and loves her enough to let her go. Although it
was a little weird for me to read a story about people falling in love who are
old enough to be my parents, judging by the dates and age she was during that
time, Krista would now be in her late forties (though at the end of the book I
realized this story took place almost a decade ago).
I had a little trouble connecting with the actual character of
Krista, she sometimes seems inconsistent in character. I was, however, able to connect with her
struggle to forgive her mother; in that way she was very real.
Dane seems a bit unrealistic. Of course I would like to think
there are men this perfect, Dane is a little too much. The struggle of the
story is more of Krista’s internal struggle to let go and love, both her mother
and Dane. The relationship struggle is between her and her mother instead of
her and Dane, which is probably why this is classified as
Fiction/General/Contemporary on the back cover of the book instead of Romance.
Overall, I would give this book 3 stars. Just okay. Not horrible,
but not great.
Decide for yourself! Read the first Chapter here.
I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group
for this review.
Please rank my review at: http://waterbrookmultnomah.com/bloggingforbooks/reviews/view/15160. (5 stars please if you're feeling kind ;D) Thanks!!!
Please rank my review at: http://waterbrookmultnomah.com/bloggingforbooks/reviews/view/15160. (5 stars please if you're feeling kind ;D) Thanks!!!
This sounds like an interesting book. Great honest review. Hugs and have a great weekend! :O)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Diane! You have a great weekend, too!
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