Be Our Valentine!

Come, join Laura Frantz, Carrie Turansky, Kate Breslin, Melanie Dobson, Roseanna White and me for this special Valentine’s Week Giveaway!
To read more about each book, visit Carrie Turansky’s blog.
My newest novel, A Hundred Crickets Singing will release April 5 and is available for preorder now from  Tyndale House Publishers or your favorite vendor.
I’ll mail the winner my book as soon as it releases.
If you enjoyed Night Bird Calling and its cast of characters in No Creek you will love this companion novel.
Here is the back cover copy of A Hundred Crickets Singing:

In wars eighty years apart, two young women living on the same Appalachian estate determine to aid soldiers dear to them and fight for justice, no matter the cost.

1944. When a violent storm rips through the Belvidere attic in No Creek, North Carolina, exposing a hidden room and trunk long forgotten, secrets dating back to the Civil War are revealed. Celia Percy, whose family lives and works in the home, suspects the truth could transform the future for her friend Marshall, now fighting overseas, whose ancestors were once enslaved by the Belvidere family. When Marshall’s Army friend, Joe, returns to No Creek with shocking news for Marshall’s family, Celia determines to right a longstanding wrong, whether or not the town is ready for it.

1861. After her mother’s death, Minnie Belvidere works desperately to keep her household running and her family together as North Carolina secedes. Her beloved older brother clings to his Union loyalties, despite the grave danger, while her hotheaded younger brother entangles himself and the family’s finances within the Confederacy. As the country and her own home are torn in two, Minnie risks her life and future in a desperate fight to gain liberty and land for those her parents intended to be free before it’s too late.


“With depictions of a small southern town “reminiscent of writings by Lisa Wingate” (Booklist on Night Bird Calling), Cathy Gohlke delivers a gripping, emotive story about friendship and the enduring promise of justice.”

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