The Wonder of You is the fifth in Susan May Warren's Christiansen family series.
So far, each book has focused on one of the six siblings in small-town Minnesota family in birth order. The last two books flip the order, though.
Amelia is the youngest and always wanted to venture out, away from Deep Haven. She took a photography course in Prague, but came home early. She had met a man there, Roark St. John, and thought they were in love. But when she saw him with someone else, she came home, brokenhearted.
She's disappointed in herself, but figures maybe she was wrong about her life direction: maybe she's meant to stay in Deep Haven after all and marry the boy she's known all her life and dated through high school, Seth.
Then Roark shows up on her family's doorstep one day with flowers and an apology. Her brothers run him off, but Amelia feels she should at least listen to what he has to say.
Roark has given himself two months to try to win Amelia back before giving in to his uncle's insistence that he come home to Brussels and take over the family business.
Amelia has insisted that there be no lying between them, but Roark is not sure how much he should tell her about his past mistakes and his fear that God has forsaken him.
In one subplot, a visiting family drowns, leaving behind their newly-adopted daughter from Ukraine who speaks no English. She comes to stay with the Christiansen family, growing close to Grace. When it appears she might be sent back to the Ukraine, Grace begins to wonder if she and Max could adopt her. But Max had long ago determined not to have children. He carries the gene of a disease that killed his father, and he is not going to leave behind fatherless children to experience the same tragedy he did.
Amelia's character is somewhat immature, but she's only twenty. She deals with what a lot of young people go through in trying to discern what God wants them to do in life. I liked that the author brought out that calling is not only a matter of which guy, which vocation, and which country one should choose, but having a heart that pursues God, trusts in His sufficiency, and wants to do His will.
And Roark needed to learn that the past is forgivable and God gives grace for each new day.
As I've said before, I like stories where the characters learn and grow, whether that story is a romance or another genre. That's certainly the case in this series.
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