About the Book
Book: Redemption’s Hope
Author: Kathleen D. Bailey
Genre: Christian fiction
Release date: July 22, 2022
Two distinct sets of villains. Two orphaned children. A man without a country and a woman with too much past…All in a rambunctious young country where anything goes, especially in the West. Seriously. What can go wrong?
In this latest installment of the best-selling series, “Western Dreams”, join Jenny and White Bear as they cross the historic West in an epic story peppered with grit, guns, and glory that award-winning author Kelly Goshorn calls “a sweeping tale of faith, dedication, and perseverance set in the American west.”
Click here to get your copy!
About the Author
Kathleen D. Bailey was a child in the 50s, a teen in the 60s, a young adult in the 70s, and a young mom in the 80s. It’s been a turbulent, colorful time to grow up, and I’ve enjoyed every minute of it and written about most of it.
More from Kathleen
The “Western Dreams” series
The Oregon Trail was one of the premier events in American history, with people giving up everything to see what waited on the other side of the continent. Some had nothing to give up, and they joined a wagon train simply to survive. That was the case with Caroline Pierce O’Leary, a gently-bred widow whose young husband died before they could make a go of their farm. What would happen, I mused, if Caroline took the skimpy proceeds from selling her farm, signed on as a cook for a wagon master, and worked her way West? And what would happen if the scout on that particular wagon train was the man who had betrayed her years before, and they had to work together to cross the prairie? What if, what if, what if?
Everyone who hopped on a wagon for the Western Migration had a story, and I knew I’d found mine. As Caroline and Michael Moriarty struggled to rebuild their relationship, a host of other characters formed around them like a snowball. The loving Harkness family, who befriended Caroline on the way down from Ohio. Pious matrons who looked down on her and their harried husbands. Jenny Thatcher, the saloon girl who breaks from that life to save Michael’s. And Pace Williams, the wagon master, a man who had seen too much of life before he even took to the trail. The first book in the Western Dreams series, “Westward Hope,” debuted in September 2019.
I fell in love with Jenny and I fell in love with Pace. Jenny followed her new friends to the muddy Oregon hamlet where they settled, and Pace gave up the trail to make a life in the Oregon woods. But I wasn’t done with either of them – they had their own stories to tell. Pace battled his own demons and his love for Michael’s sister Oona, and it was enough to give them their own book, “Settlers Hope,” published in July 2020. I also spun off two novellas, “The Logger’s Christmas Bride” and “The Widow’s Christmas Miracle,” from the bigger books, and these were published with Pelican Book Group’s Christmas Extravaganza.
Jenny Thatcher demanded her own book, and she had a lot to offer. Saloon girl, wagon train scout, hotel cook and maid, horse breeder. Jenny could do anything, and she’d already proved it in the first two books. But Jenny had some unfinished business – the handsome Indian brave who’d saved her life, early in the westward journey. She’d never forgotten him, and White Bear had never forgotten her. What if she left the horse farm, and all she’d achieved in Oregon, to take to the trail again and find him? And what if he had the same idea? What if they crisscrossed the known world, picking up strays and meeting historical figures before coming together in New Orleans? (Honestly, what better place to reconnect with a lost love?) And what if the forces of evil split them up again, so they had to keep searching?
Though Jenny accepted Christ as her Savior sometime in the second book, her past continues to haunt her, and she wonders if she can ever be good enough for God. She’s physically given up the saloon life, but her inner doubts remain. White Bear struggles with a different facet of their union: can he sentence her to the criticism and censure of the white world if they marry?
The epic journey of two larger-than-life people formed the basis for the third Western Dreams book, “Redemption’s Hope,” out July 22, 2022. Like Caroline and Michael, Pace and Oona, Jenny and White Bear find their answers in the Risen Christ.
Am I done with the West? Not likely. While I’m working on new novels set in other time periods, the West and my personal Western Dreams keep tugging at me. What happened to the Harkness family, Caroline’s friends, when they went to California? What happened to the ragged Smith children Caroline befriended? What happened to Jenny’s traveling companion, the would-be miner Noonday?
And how can I give this up when I haven’t written a cattle drive or a barroom brawl?
Blog Stops
Inklings and notions, September 2
Gina Holder, Author and Blogger, September 3 (Author Interview)
Texas Book-aholic, September 4
Library Lady’s Kid Lit, September 5 (Author Interview)
Lily’s Book Reviews, September 5
For Him and My Family, September 6
By The Book, September 7 (Author Interview)
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, September 7
Happily Managing a Household of Boys, September 8
Ashley’s Clean Book Reviews, September 9
deb’s Book Review, September 10
Jodie Wolfe – Stories Where Hope and Quirky Meet, September 11 (Author Interview)
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, September 12
Locks, Hooks and Books, September 13
Through the Fire Blogs, September 14 (Author Interview)
Connie’s History Classroom, September 15
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Kathleen is giving away the grand prize package of $50 Amazon card and copy of book!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/21363/redemption-s-hope-celebration-tour-giveaway
Interview with Kathleen
How did you get started in writing?
I always wanted to tell stories, and I was fascinated by the Maud Hart Lovelace Betsy-Tacy books. Betsy wanted to be a writer, so I figured I could too. I wrote short stories in childhood and attempted novels most of my adult life, finally being able to publish “Westward Hope” in 2019. A long haul, but worth it.
Do you have a favorite scene in your newest release?
I’d have to say it was Jenny’s dark night of the soul, on the prairie in the snow. It wasn’t comfortable for me to write and it certainly wasn’t fun, but it was a journey both of us had to take.
What is the genre you write?
Historical romance, mostly. I have a contemporary series tucked away, it isn’t the right time yet, but I veer toward history. I love the idea that people in other cultures and times need the Lord in the same way. My first two books, “Westward Hope” and “Settlers’ Hope,” were historical Christian romances. I think “Redemption’s Hope” is more in the Christian historical fiction line, or the Western adventure mode. There’s romance aplenty, but also a lot of other stuff going on. I don’t care as long as people read it…
What is one thing you hope readers will take away from your story?
Jenny finds a deeper life in Christ.
Who are your favorite authors?
I have always loved Brock and Bodie Thoene, especially their World War II and State of Israel stuff. I love the scope of their work and the relentless focus on Christ. In my own genre, I admire Lauraine Snelling and Jane Kirkpatrick.
How do you get your story ideas?
Since I do mostly historical, I’m not ripping anything from the headlines. But since I write about the West, ideas are limitless. I still haven’t done a cattle drive, a barroom brawl, or the Gold Rush. I also get my ideas from books I’ve already done, where a secondary character starts screaming for their own book. I got “Settlers’ Hope” out of “Westward Hope,” and I got “Redemption’s Hope” out of both. I knew Jenny had more to say and do.
What advice can you give to writers trying to break into the publishing world?
Take classes, take advice, take criticism. I would have broken in a lot sooner if I hadn’t thought I knew everything.
What qualities do you look for in a hero and heroine?
Flawed, passionate, soft clay for God to work with. Courage. The need to be loved. White Bear and Jenny are larger than life, at least on the surface, but they’re both lonely and hurting, with a void that can only be filled by Each Other.
What do you plan to work on next?
I tried to break free of the West, to try something new. Believe me, I’ve tried. But the West keeps coming back to me. Michael Moriarty, the hero in “Westward Hope” and a secondary in “Settlers’ Hope” and “Redemption’s Hope,” has been sending money back to his older brother Tom, stranded and mired in the Potato Famine back in Ireland. I want to do a two-part series on Tom’s journey to America: his trip across in steerage, and his wagon train experience. What the hay…
What foods do you eat when writing to keep you going?
My go-to is Earl Grey in a china cup, no matter the season.
If you could vacation anywhere, where would you go?
The Austrian/German Christmas markets, jump the channel to take in the Lessons and Carols at Christ Church Cambridge, then back to Austria for the New Year’s Eve concert with the Vienna Symphony.
Where can readers connect with you?
Facebook and LinkedIn under Kathleen D. Bailey, and also through Pelican.
Jode, I am SO HAPPY to be here! I’ll be in and out today and tomorrow and ready to field readers’ questions. Thanks for having me!
Great to have you here.
I enjoyed the interview.
Thank you, Rita.
Thanks for stopping by, Rita.
I enjoyed reading the interview and learning a bit about you, Kathleen! Redemption’s Hope sounds like an excellent read!
Thanks for sharing it with me and have a sunshiny day!
Thanks Eva, glad you could stop by.
Great to have you here, Eva.
Jenny’s and White Owl’s story will be a very engrossing read.
Roxanne, I’ve encountered you on other blogs and I think you would like this one.
🙂 Thanks for stopping by, Roxanne.
Good interview. Thank you.
Thank you, Sarah.
Glad you liked it, Sarah.
This sounds like a really great read!
Thank you, Debbie. I had fun doing it. I (almost) took everything I wanted to have in a Western novel and threw it in a blender. I wanted something on the Pueblo culture, in went Taos. I had just been to San Antonio and wanted to deduct the trip, in went San Antone. I wanted some kind of pivotal moment at New Orleans, which is unlike any other city in America and possibly the world, so in went the Crescent City. And John Wayne always had a smart-mouthed kid of two in his films, so in went the orphans.
Hope you enjoy it, Debbie. Thanks for stopping by.
Thank you, Sarah.
Thank you for sharing your interview, bio and book details, Redemption’s Hope sounds like a wonderful story and I am looking forward to reading it
Hope you enjoy it, Bea. Thanks for stopping by.
My niece would like this book.
Thanks for the contest.