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A review by georgiaonyrmnd
A Girl's Guide to the Outback by Jessica Kate
4.0
I’m so happy that we get to find out what happens to Sam, the youth minister who was introduced in Love and Other Mistakes.
This book mostly takes place on a farm in the Australian outback and is a Christian friends to lovers (and by lovers I mean there is smooching) romance with a second chances romance as a secondary plot line. Kimberly is a straight talking business woman who is passionate about ministry but has a hard time communicating. Sam is the founder of a youth ministry who quits out of fear and retreats to his home in Australia, where his sister Jules has taken over the family farm and is near financial ruin.
When Kimberly comes to the outback to help with the farm’s finances in exchange for the opportunity to woo Sam back to the ministry, she has to come face to face with a growing attraction to the Aussie and deal with her own feelings of loneliness and fear.
Sam too has to come to terms with the failures of his past and they all must find their identity in God or risk more regret.
I really appreciate how the author weaves in truths about the faith without cheesiness and has a genuine love story (also without cheesiness) and with some PG heat.
This book mostly takes place on a farm in the Australian outback and is a Christian friends to lovers (and by lovers I mean there is smooching) romance with a second chances romance as a secondary plot line. Kimberly is a straight talking business woman who is passionate about ministry but has a hard time communicating. Sam is the founder of a youth ministry who quits out of fear and retreats to his home in Australia, where his sister Jules has taken over the family farm and is near financial ruin.
When Kimberly comes to the outback to help with the farm’s finances in exchange for the opportunity to woo Sam back to the ministry, she has to come face to face with a growing attraction to the Aussie and deal with her own feelings of loneliness and fear.
Sam too has to come to terms with the failures of his past and they all must find their identity in God or risk more regret.
I really appreciate how the author weaves in truths about the faith without cheesiness and has a genuine love story (also without cheesiness) and with some PG heat.