Fly Away Home
Running away from your problems is not the best way to a fresh start
Claire Perkins struggles with her past, even when she was thirty-eight years old.
While attending her abusive mother’s funeral in the town she grew up in, Claire discovers a deeper emotional scar that challenges her definition of home.
Claire learns about a deeper emotional wound that questions her idea of home while visiting the funeral of her violent mother in her hometown.
The inability to maintain a front causes Claire to make the only decision that seems sense: to go to a peaceful location far from the possibility of experiencing any more heartbreak and disappointment.
In the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, Pigeon Grove seems to be a peaceful southern town. However, this little town has a certain appeal that has different ideas for those hoping to slink into the solitude of a single life.
Claire is led down a different road by this close-knit group, who have nothing more in mind than to disappear into the background.
A small mountain town helps Claire connect the dots to create the life she’s always imagined
Such a really emotional, uplifting, and spiritual novel. I sense the warmth and love of my Heavenly Father and His teachings from the Bible while reading this book, despite the author not coming off as overtly Christian.
The core idea is that we are all products of our pasts and that we may choose how to deal with them as we go through life.
It is hoped that everyone who reads this book would choose to live, to assist others, to walk in love and mercy, and to be open to enjoying life.
Cenker does a good job of conveying the idea of quitting everything for a fresh beginning. Unfortunately, the thoughts of the main character are too gloomy. It should feel fantastic to start over. Additionally, falling in love with someone who is just attracting you