The Maid of Ballymacool by Jennifer Deibel – Blog Tour

  • Title: The Maid of Ballymacool: A Novel
  • Author: Jennifer Deibel
  • Genre: Historical Romance, Historical Fiction, Inspirational Fiction
  • Publisher: Fleming H. Revell Co (February 21, 2023)
  • Length: (352) pages
  • Format: Hardcover, Trade Paperback, & eBook 
  • ISBN: 978-0800741747
  • Tour Dates: February 13 – 27, 2023

About The Book

Brianna Kelly was abandoned at Ballymacool House and Boarding School as an infant. She has worked there since she was a wee girl and will likely die there. Despite a sense that she was made for something more, Brianna feels powerless to change her situation, so she consoles herself by exploring the Ballymacool grounds, looking for hidden treasures to add to the secret trove beneath the floorboards of her room.

When Michael Wray, the son of local gentry, is sent to Ballymacool to deal with his unruly cousin, he finds himself drawn to Brianna, immediately and inescapably. There is something about her that feels so . . . familiar. When Brianna finds a piece of silver in the woods, she commits to learning its origins, with the help of Michael. What they discover may change everything.

Fan favorite Jennifer Deibel invites you back to the Emerald Isle in the 1930s for this fresh take on the Cinderella story, complete with a tantalizing mystery, a budding romance, and a chance at redemption.

Advance Praise

  • “Deibel’s update on the “Cinderella” story features sympathetic, three-dimensional characters that readers will find easy to root for as they navigate the page-turning plot and find their way to one another. This heartwarming entry will keep readers hooked till its satisfying close.”— Publisher’s Weekly
  • “A slow-building, delicious romance wrapped in a mystery!”— Erica Vetsch, author of the Thorndike & Swann Regency Mysteries

Purchase Links

AMAZON | BAKER PUBLISHING | BARNES & NOBLE | BOOK DEPOSITORY | BOOKSHOP | GOODREADS

Author Bio

Jennifer Deibel is the author of A Dance in Donegal (winner of the Kipp Award for Historical Romance) and The Lady of Galway Manor (a Parable Group bestseller). Her work has appeared on (in)courage, on The Better Mom, in Missions Mosaic magazine, and in other publications. With firsthand immersive experience abroad, Jennifer writes stories that help redefine home through the lens of culture, history, and family. After nearly a decade of living in Ireland and Austria, she now lives in Arizona with her husband and their three children.

WEBSITE | TWITTER | FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | GOODREADS

Barbara’s Review – 4 of 5 Stars

Period:  1935, County Donegal, Ireland

If you are looking for a clean, sweet, Christian retelling of the Cinderella story, then this is the book for you.  The protagonists are two lovely people who want to be of help in the world and the antagonist, well, she doesn’t.  As I read through certain scenes, the original Disney cartoon movie of Cinderella kept running through my head.  You know, the scenes where Cinderella is dancing with the animals and communing with nature. 

Brianna Kelly has lived at Ballymacool House and Boarding School for Girls since she was dropped off on the headmistress’s front stoop.  She has never known anything except drudgery and she works from before sunup till nearly midnight.  She longs to know who she really is – where she comes from – who her parents were – why they abandoned her, but that doesn’t keep her from having a sweet, caring, lovely disposition.  Though she often wonders why the headmistress despises her and treats her so cruelly, she’ll never ask.

Michael Wray and his family are among the ascendency class – wealthy landowners.  Michael, however, prefers to be out among the people, the working classes, rather that the pretentious wealthy aristocrats.  As a dutiful son, he goes to the Ballymacool House when his parents ask him to go straighten out a problem with his cousin who is boarding there. 

Brianna brings out a deep protective streak in Michael and he visits the school longer than originally expected to try to protect her.  As they get to know each other, they come to care for each other – but Brianna is afraid to trust.  She’s never known what it was to be loved, have affection, and have someone to protect her. 

I enjoyed the story, but I found myself skimming over large parts of it.  I skimmed because it seemed too slow-paced and a bit draggy in parts and because the story takes place in a time and place with which I’m not familiar.  I had never heard of the ascendency class, but will now have to do some reading up on it.

I voluntarily read and reviewed an Advanced Reader Copy (ARC) of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

The Duke’s Secret Cinderella by Eva Devon

The Duke's Secret Cinderella (Never a Wallflower, #3)The Duke’s Secret Cinderella by Eva Devon

Tracy’s rating: 4 of 5 stars

Series: Never A Wallflower, #3

Release Date: February 21, 2023

According to his mother, Rafe Dorchester, the Duke of Rockford is getting married. This is news to him, but when she basically blackmails him into agreeing, he knows his days as a bachelor are over. And to make matters worse, she tells him she has a list of potential brides for him, but her list only has one name – Lady Francesca, daughter of Lord Palmerton. She informs him that he is to call on her tomorrow and his mother expects them to announce their betrothal at her ball. He agrees to meet her because he has no choice but Rafe is a romantic and longs for a love match, like his parents and his grandparents had, he is sure that when he meets the right woman, it will hit him right away and he will know. And he was right, but the woman he meets is nothing like he expected and he is hit, but it is by his beauty and it is with a brick!

Charlotte Browne is making her way to Marshalsea Debtor’s Prison to hopefully free her elderly friend and servant, Stevenson. Stevenson was imprisoned for a debt that his employer, who happens to be Charlotte’s stepfather, Lord Palmerton took out in his name and refused to pay. She is sure he did it to punish Charlotte. Charlotte’s father died when she was just a baby and her mother remarried a few years later to a widower with two small children of his own. When Charlotte’s mother died not long after, Lord Palmerton kept Charlotte rather than sending her to an orphanage, but she is little more than a servant and is not allowed to leave the house. He is petty and cruel to her and hurts the people she loves to punish her. But her task has been far from easy, and when she is accosted by a thief who tries to take the money she scrapped together to free her friend, help comes from an unexpected source, whom she accidentally hits with a brick! Rafe chases off the thief and insists on going with her to free her friend. He uses his title to get them in and even pays the fee when she discovers she lost her coin. He is perfect and clearly not for the likes of her, but a girl can dream. Later when he arrives at her home to call on her stepsister Lady Francesca, they meet again and another servant calls her Lady Charlotte, and before she can stop herself, she elaborates on the lie by claiming to be Francesca’s cousin. And so begins a romance that can only end in heartbreak…

This book was a well-written and nicely-paced page-turner, but it was not what I was expecting! I thought this was going to be a lighthearted, warm, and fuzzy Cinderella retelling. And while it was a twist on Cinderella, it was anything but lighthearted. The story is filled with lies, secrets, threats, toe-curling kisses, wonderful secondary characters, a truly evil villain, surprising twists, and a shocking revelation before a nail-biter ending that leads to their HEA. Rafe was a truly wonderful hero, I felt so bad for him, he wore his heart on his sleeve and was hurt again and again by Charlotte. Hurting Rafe was the last thing Charlotte wanted to do, but more than her happiness is at stake, she wants to tell Rafe the truth but knows it will only end up hurting more people if she does, so she tries to push him away, but finds that she can’t hurt him to save others, leaving her with no opinions that do not end in heartache. I honestly didn’t think this story was going to be so angsty, there are moments of levity that keep it from being too heavy, but the villain in this story is so vile and so powerful, that he sets the tone for most of the book. That being said, having that much angst during the book, made the ending that much more magical and satisfying. Overall, I enjoyed this story, angst and all, and would happily recommend the title to anyone who enjoys historical romance, fairytale retellings, or just plain old “good vs. evil” stories! This book is the third book in the series, but each book is a standalone title and they can be read in any order.

*I am voluntarily leaving a review for an eARC that I requested and was provided to me by the publisher. All opinions in this review are my own.*