04 July 2016

The Loyal Heart by Shelley Shepard Gray

★★★★
Goodreads | Amazon
Robert came to Galveston to fulfill his promise to a dying man and look after his widow. He didn’t expect to find love in the unlikeliest of places.

Robert Truax, former Second Lieutenant and Confederate officer in the Civil War, made a promise to his comrade Phillip Markham. If anything happened to Phillip, Robert would look after his beloved wife, Miranda. She was his life, his world, his everything.

After the war, Robert is left to pick up the pieces and fulfill his pact. When he arrives at Miranda's home in Galveston, Texas, things are worse than he imagined. Phillip's name has been dragged through the mud, everyone in town believes him to be a traitor, and his widow is treated as an outcast. Even more disturbing is her emotional well-being. Miranda seems hopeless, lost, and so very alone.

Robert had thought his duty would be simple. He would help Miranda as quickly as possible in order to honor a promise. But the moment Robert laid eyes on her, his plans changed. He's mesmerized by her beauty and yearns to help her in any way he can.

He makes it his duty to protect Miranda, turn her reputation around, and to find some way to help her smile again. But it doesn't prove to be an easy task—Robert knows something about Phillip that could shake Miranda to the core and alter her view of the man she thought she knew so well.

What an enjoyable start to Shelley Shepard Gray’s Lone Star Hero series. A character-driven post-Civil War story, The Loyal Heart focuses on an officer who made a promise to a dying man and a widow struggling with grief and rumors. With suspense, mystery, and romance, the relationship develops between these two characters, and their story kept me interested from beginning to end. Fans of historical fiction will not want to miss The Loyal Heart - I really liked it and can’t wait to read An Uncommon Protector now.

Thanks to BookLook Bloggers, I received a copy of The Loyal Heart and the opportunity to honestly review it. I was not required to write a positive review, and all the opinions I have expressed are my own. (I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”)

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