Always On My Mind is the fourth novel in the Christiansen family series by Susan May Warren.
Casper is the fourth child and middle son of the family. The previous book, When I Fall in Love, focused on his older sister, Grace, but also shared Casper's budding relationship with a new girl in town, Raina.
After a big blow-up near the end of that book, Casper, an archeology major, accepted an invitation to a dig in Honduras. He's always felt overshadowed by his brothers and wants to do something to stand out on his own. But this dig is going nowhere. Even a side project yields no results. He can't get Raina off his mind. He decides to forgive the past, go home, and tell Raina he loves her.
But when he gets home, he is surprised to discover that Raina is pregnant and shocked to learn who the father is. Further, Raina wants him to go away and leave her alone.
Raina still loves Caspar, but feels she is damaged and no good for him.
Casper goes back to Deep Haven to help at his family's resort and work in town until he can decide what to do next. He also helps out at the town Historical Society, where he's surprised to discover that Raina has come back to Deep Haven, too. Their work throws them together, so they form a tentative friendship.
Caspar is dismayed when Raina starts dating Monty, a bully he knew from high school. But Monty turns on the charm with Raina, and she delights in feeling special in his eyes.
One subplot involves Casper's discovery of clues from an old local legend about a missing gangster and the steel bonds he supposedly left hidden somewhere.
Another involves oldest brother Darek, featured in the first book in the series, who has taken over running his parents' resort after they retired. But the responsibilities of repairs and projects and the lack of customers and therefore income weigh heavily on him. His long hours away from home start taking a toll on his family. He wonders if he should go back to firefighting.
I've mentioned before that I'm not keen on romances. But I do like good stories where people learn, grow, and overcome. Susan's stories don't have the silliness and physicality that some romances do. Plus, I got invested in the family in the first book, and since the series was free at Audible for a time, I decided to follow through.
Susan had written here that part of her reason for writing this series was that she and her husband were in the season of parenting adult children, and she wanted to write about "watching, hoping, praying your adult children into a legacy of faith." The Christiansen parents, John and Ingrid, are somewhat background characters in the books, but emerge to share a word of wisdom, guidance, or encouragement here and there.
Each story begins a beautiful letter that Ingrid has written to the child featured in that book.
Susan writes that part of her focus in this particular novel is "What do you do when you love someone who seems bent on self-destruction? Worse, when they seem incapable of listening to reason? Pray. Hope. Love anyway."
There's kind of an obvious symbolism between Casper's hunt for lost treasure and Raina being a type of lost treasure.
My only difficulty with this story is that I didn't care for Raina at first. I didn't have a problem with the fact that she was a "broken soul," had a lot of baggage, and needed redemption. I just didn't see any qualities that would cause Casper to fall in love with her. But by the end of this story, I did.
On a side note, for some reason, the audiobook covers are different from the e-book and print covers. I like the book covers much better.
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