Release Date: 15th November 2018
Publisher: Arrow
Publisher: Arrow
Genres: Romance
An uplifting tale of finding unexpected love in the Alaskan wilderness from bestselling author, Debbie Macomber.
Before
beginning her new job as sous chef at one of Seattle's finest
restaurants, Josie Stewart takes on a six-month position cooking at a
lodge in an Alaskan lake town. It's only temporary--or so she thinks, as
she becomes a valued part of the local community, falling in love with
the people who call the Klutina Lake home.
But one man, in
particular, stands out among the rest of Josie's new friends: an
intriguing swordsmith whose very existence forces her to question
whether her heart wants to return to Washington at all.
EXTRACT
The Caribou Lake Lodge was
closing for the winter, and after six months in Ponder, I was sorry to leave.
It’d been the longest time I’d ever spent away from my mother and the city of
Seattle, where I’d been born and raised. The separation hadn’t been easy, but I
felt it was time well spent. It’d always been just my mom and me, and being
apart had taught me valuable lessons about myself, lessons I hoped to take with
me as I headed off to my first real job. As a sous- chef, I’d be working hand
in hand with the head chef, creating menu items, plus training new staff, as
well as keeping the kitchen organized and flowing. I’d been given the
opportunity of a lifetime, working in a newly opened Seattle restaurant with
Douglas Anton, a renowned chef. A career break like this didn’t come along
every day. For me, it was a dream come true. The culinary school I’d attended
had recommended me for the position. Their faith in me was more than I could
have dreamed. The only drawback was that I had to wait six months after
graduation for the completion of Chef Anton’s newest restaurant, which was why
I happened to be in Alaska. This opportunity not only helped me to pass the
time, but it also gave me the chance to do what I loved best: create recipes
based on locally sourced ingredients.
Now it was the end of October,
and time to return home and start my career. In the morning, the Brewsters, the
remainder of the staff, and I would catch the last passenger ferry for the long
ride down the lake to semi- civilization, before hopping on a small plane to
Fairbanks, and from there, on to Seattle.
I was surprised at how well I’d
acclimated to Alaska and to the lack of amenities, considering I’d grown up in a city where I’d
had everything at my fingertips. Ponder had no shopping mall, theater, or
Starbucks. Access to the Internet was only a recent addition in the past few
years, and that had been a game- changer for everyone in town.
Alaska was beautiful. One of my
favorite things to do was watch the eagles dive for fish in the lake. Jerry
Brewster, the lodge owner, entertained me with story after story of the eagles
on Caribou Lake. One time he’d hooked a salmon and was reeling it in when an
eagle swooped down and grabbed the fish and flew off with it. With the fish
still attached to the line, Jerry attempted to reel it in, fighting the eagle
for the salmon. While Jerry eventually won the battle, the eagle had left talon
marks on the salmon’s flesh.
The longer I lived at the lodge, the more beauty I
discovered each day. I could stare for hours at the night sky. Living in the
city, I’d never truly seen stars the way I could in Alaska. I was left
awestruck by how many were visible in the totally black sky, like diamond dust
scattered across the heavens.
Of course, I’d been here through
spring, summer, and early autumn, when the awesome splendor of all that was
Alaska was evident every day. I’d been able to observe moose and caribou from
afar, and even once saw a bear amble down the middle of town as if it was
shopping day. Moments like those made me have no regrets for not having access
to a Starbucks or a nail salon for almost six months. I’d more than survived
this experience— I’d thrived here in Ponder. I wouldn’t have thought it was
possible when I’d arrived. Those first couple weeks in town, all I saw was what
the little town didn’t have. It wasn’t long before I began to appreciate the
abundance of all that it did have to offer.
ABOUT DEBBIE MACOMBER
Debbie Macomber is a No. 1 New York Times bestselling
author and one of today’s most popular writers. In addition to fiction,
Debbie has also published two bestselling cookbooks; numerous
inspirational and nonfiction works; and two acclaimed children’s books.
The beloved and bestselling Cedar Cove series became Hallmark Channel’s first dramatic scripted television series, Debbie Macomber's Cedar Cove, which
was ranked as the top program on US cable TV when it debuted in summer
2013. Hallmark has also produced many successful films based on
Debbie’s bestselling Christmas novels.
Debbie Macomber owns her own tea room, and a yarn store, A Good Yarn, named after the shop featured in her popular Blossom Street novels. She and her husband, Wayne, serve on the Guideposts National Advisory Cabinet, and she is World Vision’s international spokesperson for their Knit for Kids charity
initiative. A devoted grandmother, Debbie and her husband Wayne live in
Port Orchard, Washington (the town on which her Cedar Cove novels are
based) and winter in Florida.
PRAISE FOR DEBBIE MACOMBER
‘If there’s a star in the romance and women’s fiction firmament, chances are high it’s Debbie Macomber’ Publishers Weekly
‘Macomber is an institution in women’s fiction’ Booklist
‘You’ll be hooked on the latest novel from Debbie Macomber if you were a fan of the late, great, Maeve Binchy’ Yours Magazine
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