Review: Jordinia Romance Adventure Series by C.K. Brooke

About The Emperor’s Expedition

When the Emperor of Jordinia tasks his two underachieving nephews to spearhead an expedition to the untamed North Isles, the impish and audacious Duke Andrew leaps at the chance to make history and stand out among his four brothers. While he manages to convince his reclusive brother Ludwig to join him, he is less enthusiastic about their sister tagging along.

Duchess Johannah, desperate to conceal her secret, out-of-wedlock pregnancy and evade courtly scandal, sees the expedition as the perfect ruse. Accompanied by their entourage of intrepid guards, the royal siblings set forth to conquer the wilderness…only to discover that the islands are already inhabited.

Amidst perilous clashes with the Northern clans, alliances are forged and fractured, loyalties waver, and forbidden love commands sacrifice as each explorer’s fealty to blood and country is put to the test. From an icy shipwreck to abductions, ambushes, and arranged marriages, nothing goes as planned in this fast-paced comedy of errors brimming with humor, heroics, and plenty of heart.

My Review

C.K. Brooke delivers an exhilarating journey in The Emperor’s Expedition! This fast-paced adventure is brimming with rich storytelling and a cast of distinct, well-developed characters. The suspense had me eagerly turning pages. Brooke masterfully blends action, intrigue, and emotion, making this a truly immersive read. If you love gripping fantasy with depth and adventure, this book is a must-read.

The Emperor’s Expedition on Amazon

About The Emperor’s Daughters

Grand Duchess Raphaela of Jordinia has sworn off men and matrimony, aching for independence beyond familiar soil. When an unexpected invitation to a distant palace arrives, Raphaela sees it as her chance at freedom—if only her father, the Emperor, will allow it.

Meanwhile, her sister Benedicta is determined to make a difference in the world before settling down. As she travels to the tropics on a charity mission, Benedicta must prove to the mission’s leader that she is more than just a pampered princess.

In the desert, following an enchanting encounter with the alluring Sultan of Al-Habar, Raphaela struggles to resist his charm, all while fending off advances from his slimy stepson, Prince Arwun. Ensnared in a web of palace intrigue, danger, secret romance, and even murder, Raphaela must navigate the treacherous waters of loyalty and love in a foreign land. Will the sisters find the courage to defy convention and forge their own paths, or will tradition and betrayal tear apart their family and their hearts?

My Review

From the very first page, The Emperor’s Daughters had me completely enthralled! C.K. Brooke masterfully weaves a tale of love, intrigue, and suspense, keeping the tension high and the pages turning. The strong-willed female characters are truly inspiring, bringing depth and resilience to the story. With its perfect blend of romance, mystery, and adventure, this novel is an absolute gem.

The Emperor’s Daughters on Amazon

Joe’s Wounded Queen

Joe’s Wounded Queen is the fourth book of In the Name of Family Series. I also consider this book the fifth book of the Chemical Attraction Series, because it’s a continuation of the fourth, Chemical Reaction. Why add it to the new series? It’s a better fit to the overall storyline of In the Name of Family Series. In any case, it’s a standalone novel.

In the Name of Family Series: We support and sacrifice. We despise, disrupt, and destroy.

Madeline’s independent; Joe needs to be in charge. They marry a month after meeting. Can their relationship really last a lifetime?

On their honeymoon at a secluded cabin in Canada, FBI Agent Joe Roberts and Dr. Madeline Pierce deal with the profound effects from their previous case. They have yet to consummate their marriage and struggle to share their apprehensions.

They receive a call from the FBI. Someone broke into Joe’s apartment, looking for their whereabouts. The hunt is now on in an epic chase across the wilderness. The stakes are high, and the journey is as perilous as it is passionate.

Joe and Madeline’s knowledge of each other will play a vital role while on the run. If successful, their insights will save lives and, more importantly, save their marriage.

Joe’s Wounded Queen on AMAZON

Excerpt from THEIR STOLEN HEARTS #BookSeries #SeniorSchemes

STILL IRRITATED AFTER A BAD first date on Sunday afternoon, FBI Agent Ray Anderson tightened his tie and glowered into the bathroom mirror. He had driven over an hour to meet for brunch. She had tried to get information on BennTech’s criminal activities, which, of course, he wouldn’t give out. Then, she received a work text and had to leave.

Right, because research scientists are on call. What’s her problem with me? I’m not Joe Handsome, but who is? I’ve had my share of dates, only some bad. Why did this one irk me so much?

He released those negative thoughts like his self-help audiobooks suggested and sighed at the sounds of arguing in the kitchen. He could usually block it out while listening through his headphones.

He took out his gun from the lockbox in the top dresser drawer. As he added it to his hip, he listened to doors slamming from the hallway. Atop his dresser, the purple clay octopus the size of his fist slid to the edge. His niece, Kami, had made it for him when she and his sister, Julie, had moved in with him ten years ago. Kami was five at the time.

Ray had had Julie’s boyfriend arrested for attempted murder on the night Julie had decided to leave him. The bastard didn’t take it well and had almost choked her to death. Kami had nightmares since, that her father was trying to kill her, too. Ray helped them through it. The purple octopus paperweight was a thank-you gift from Kami, who’d made it in her first-grade art class. Ray liked its long thick arms bent in all directions, as if moving around. It was his prized possession and a reminder that his FBI job ultimately protected families.

Presently, Ray was used to playing referee between his sister and her now-teenage daughter. But he didn’t feel like doing it that day. He had dedicated his life to his sister and niece, putting his love life on hold to take care of them. Any woman he was remotely interested in, Julie hated. He wanted to share a relaxing conversation over a meal with someone who wasn’t a drama queen like the two women he currently lived with.

Ray took a deep breath and opened his bedroom door. He drifted into the kitchen. Dirty plates, cups, and pans cluttered the countertops. Women are slobs. He stuck a bagel into the toaster and put the dishes into the empty dishwasher. They had this discussion often. Just put your damn dishes into the washer instead of the sink. When another bedroom door slammed, he winced and waited for the explosion.

“I am a woman,” Kami shouted from the hallway. “I’m old enough to date!”

“Fifteen is not a woman,” Julie bellowed. “You can’t drive or vote!”

“Menstruating is a sign of womanhood,” Kami shrieked.

Oh, boy. Wishing he could sneak out the backdoor, he put cream cheese on his bagel and waited. It didn’t take long.

“Ray,” Julie said in the doorway, “tell her she’s too young.”

“I need more information first,” he stated, before taking a big bite of his breakfast. Staying neutral is my protection. He leaned back against the counter.

“More information? She’s fifteen!”

“I’d like to hear his questions, Mother,” Kami said with a smug smile.

“Fine.” Julie’s glare could have burned his bagel.

He took another bite and checked the wall clock. Damn. He still had time before he left for the office. With hands on their hips, they stood next to each other and waited. Both women were thin and tall, Kami more gangly then her mother. Tall and thin ran in the Anderson family.

Kami had started volleyball practice and was constantly complaining she was sore, also the reason she couldn’t do her chores. Julie worked the second shift at the local IHOP. Ray and his colleague, Tim Orr, had had her as their waitress once. She got their orders wrong, not even close.

“Who’s the boy? Where does he want to take you?” Ray asked.

“It’s Spenser. And we were going with a group to see a movie,” Kami replied.

“You didn’t tell me it was with a group of kids,” Julie said, scowling.

“You didn’t ask, Mother. You just yell,” she replied. “You always yell.”

“Because you don’t hear me otherwise!”

Ray put his knife in the dishwasher. He’d get coffee on the way. As the yelling ramped up again, he withdrew from the kitchen. Kami and Julie stormed past him and slammed their bedroom doors. They would tie for first place in a door slamming contest. Twice he’d had to adjust their doors’ hinges.

Feeling a nagging headache coming on, he opened his bedroom to retrieve his backpack. His purple octopus was on the floor, arms broken into pieces.

“God damn it!” He silenced their ranting behind their closed doors.

Knowing he rarely lost his temper, Julie and Kami opened theirs to see what had happened. Ray picked up the pieces. He stomped into the kitchen and chucked them into the garbage.

“Sorry,” Julie whispered.

“Me, too,” Kami added.

“Not good enough. I loved that octopus, and now it’s trash. Work. It. Out. And I expect a clean kitchen when I get home.”

He slammed the garage door on the way to his Corvette, his guilty red pleasure. He wanted to peel out, but didn’t. Damn it. I really loved that dumb paperweight.

Their Stolen Hearts Available on AMAZON

Their Stolen Hearts

In the Name of Family Series: We support and sacrifice. We despise, disrupt, and destroy.

Parallel to The Major’s Dilemma, Christina Thompson nudges her secondary characters into the spotlight. Everyone has a story, and everyone has something they hold dear. What happens when those hearts are stolen?

While Division Director Peter Bingaman and his FBI agents investigate a string of robberies, a disgruntled agent steals a private envelope from Peter’s safe. The potential revelation of its contents threatens to shatter Peter’s world.

A slow-moving widow in a new fast-paced town, Sylvia Folkert is afraid of change. Her solace has been her wedding ring, recently stolen. At the local book club, she and the feisty seniors put aside their troubles to help a man who’s been wrongfully arrested for robbery. To prove his innocence, the women scheme to outwit the agents. They quickly find themselves entangled in the FBI’s dangerous case.

Their Stolen Hearts on AMAZON

Excerpt from THE MAJOR’S DILEMMA #MilitaryThriller #FamilyVsDuty #MilitaryRomance

LOGAN AND SAMANTHA RODE THEIR tandem bike from the cabin two miles outside Yellow Springs to Donna’s Diner. In a t-shirt, jeans, and work boots, Logan steered toward the parking lot. The humidity didn’t seem to affect Sam behind him.

In an oversized zippered hoodie, his wife smiled up at him with her mesmerizing eyes, one green and the other cobalt blue. He adored that grin and the freckles across her face. Wearing sandals and shorts, she hid her four-month baby bump.

They wanted to keep the secret for as long as possible. The gossip chain in their rural town was expansive. Since their notoriety last summer, they fiercely protected their privacy.

Stopping next to the other bikes on the sunny day, they headed for the diner. “I hope the smells don’t make me barf,” Sam said.

“The books say you shouldn’t have morning sickness anymore.” He had gotten the books at the library in Sebright, the next town over. Their doctor was also in Sebright, giving them slightly more privacy.

“So, because you read it in a book, you’re dismissing what I’m feeling?”

He winced. It wasn’t the first time she’d said it. “I’m just saying, the morning sickness should stop soon.”

Pausing on the sidewalk, she put her hands on her hips. “Well, I’m sorry I still have it, morning, noon, and night.” Tearing up, she stormed toward the diner.

He sighed and followed. Crying over anything and everything seemed to be the biggest issue for her. The books never said how to combat these symptoms. Just hormones, he thought. When she turned and glared at him, he smiled innocently. Is reading minds a pregnancy superpower?

He held the door open for her then held his breath. Depending on the smells, they may stay or immediately leave. He hoped they would stay, since they were supposed to be meeting his co-worker, Jack Parker, for lunch.

He and Jack had lunch a few times in Sebright where Jack lived, but Jack suggested meeting them in Yellow Springs. This was the first time Samantha would be joining them.

Logan waited for his wife to decide. She nodded as Donna, the diner’s new owner, waved them to a square table in the corner away from the bakery counter of breads, donuts, and muffins. Logan ignored the old-fashioned diner motif of plastic red-and-white checkered tablecloths with black-and-white pictures on the walls.

With the air conditioning on high, Sam shivered as she slid onto the chair. One minute she was hot; another, cold. His strict military background had a hard time adjusting to her random symptoms that seemed to change within a heartbeat. Not quite a war zone where his quick reflexes were needed. Although, some days …

“Just the two of you today?” Donna asked.

“One more,” Logan replied.

She set down three menus. “Let’s see. Coke for the major. Iced tea for you, Ms. Sam?”

“Yes, please,” she said. Donna nodded, then grabbed the dirty dishes from the table next to them.

“Caffeine?” he asked. As soon as he said it, he wished he hadn’t.

“Your drink has it, too,” she replied as one of her five-year-old dance students, wearing a rainbow tutu over a green shirt and orange shorts, approached her. “Emma, are you ready for dance classes to start?”

Emma nodded and did a quick ball-chain to prove it. “I’ve been practicing all summer.”

With her long blond hair in a high, tight ponytail, Emma’s overly tan mom stood behind her. “She sure has. Tapping from dusk ’til dawn on our hardwood floors.”

Sam laughed. “I can’t wait to see how you’ve progressed.”

Emma beamed and gave Sam a brief hug. “See you soon,” Emma said, taking her mother’s hand.

Logan lowered his voice as Emma and her mother left the restaurant. “Are you up for teaching?” Her classes were scheduled to start in two weeks.

“It’s my job, and I enjoy it.” She sat back as Donna set their drinks on the table.

“We’ll order when Jack gets here,” Logan said. Donna nodded, then rushed away to help the customers in line at the bakery counter.

“Logan, will you stop being overly protective? I’m not the first woman to have a baby.”

“You’re the first woman to have my baby.”

She snorted. “I’d better be.”

He patted her hand as Jack approached their table, smoothing down the baggy t-shirt on his thin frame. Logan smiled that Jack had a fresh haircut and clean shave. He had looked forward to meeting Sam.

Logan stood and shook Jack’s sweaty hand. “I’m glad you made it. Sam, this is Jack Parker. Jack, my wife.”

“Nice to finally meet you,” Sam said. “Have a seat.”

“Thanks,” Jack replied, easing down onto the chair as if afraid he’d miss it and fall on the floor.

“Logan tells me you’re a hi-lo driver at the distribution center. My dad let me drive one once. I backed into one of the five-foot-high shelves at the base. I knocked over four of them like a domino chain reaction.”

Jack laughed. “It takes practice.”

“Jack’s maneuvering is second nature. A skill and talent,” Logan added.

Seeming uncomfortable with the compliment, Jack bounced his knee under the table. He played with the corner of his menu. “I met your father once,” Jack said to Sam.

“Really? When?” Sam asked.

Oh, boy, Logan thought. Anytime Sam’s father, General Steven Randall, was brought up, Sam teared up and cried, full-on snot sobs. She still missed him. Going on three years now.

“He came to the high school here in Yellow Springs when I was a freshman, and talked about how tough it is to distinguish between right from wrong.” He set his hands on his lap and rubbed his damp palms on his jeans. “I should have listened better.”

“Hey,” Logan said, “you made mistakes and made amends.”

Jack looked over at Sam. “He told you I sold drugs and did time?”

With pen and pad, Donna stopped at their table. After writing down their order of burgers and a Coke for Jack, she quickly left as more people lined up at the bakery counter.

“He did,” Sam said, “and he also told me you got your GED while there. That, to me, takes dedication, because you have to learn everything on your own.” She unzipped her hoodie, then put her hands around her glass of iced tea. She used the condensation around the glass to cool her face.

Jack sat up straighter and nodded. “I still read a lot of different books.”

“That’s great,” Logan said, happy to hear Jack speaking positively about his life these days.

“Wait. You went to high school here?” Sam asked, leaning forward, her belly hiding under the table.

“Yeah, for a while,” Jack said.

“Did you ever have Mr. Smith for English?” Sam asked, sliding her fingers into the sleeves of her hoodie.

Logan noticed that, in just a few seconds, her body radiated heat then shivered from a chill. I don’t understand it at all.

“Yeah,” Jack said, “he loved Shakespeare. I hated reading those plays aloud in class.”

Sam laughed and turned to Logan. “He’d split up the parts to everyone in class and then we’d read it like putting on the play from our desks.”

Grinning, Jack nodded. “I liked Mr. Miller for science. He showed us all these cool experiments. He once had us repeat the animal classifications over and over until we had them memorized. I still remember: kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species.”

Family, genus, species,” she finished with him. “Me, too, and all the girls had crushes on him.”

“Did you?” Logan asked, enjoying their memories. Much different than his high school experience.

“Of course; he was cute. Jack, did you have Mr. Bale for P.E. in middle school?”

“Oh, yeah, he was so mean. I ran so many laps,” Jack said.

Nodding, Sam turned again to Logan. “Mr. Bale made us play cutthroat dodgeball, a mix of boys and girls on each team. The boys whipped the balls so hard I had bruises. The losing team had to run laps up and down the bleachers all the way around the gym.”

“Wow, it sounds a lot like Bear when I was in basic training,” Logan added. Barrett worked this scrawny kid hard.

Donna and her teen waitress-in-training set their food in front of them. Sam took a big, juicy bite of her cheeseburger. Rolling her eyes, it appeared she was savoring it. Hesitant at first, Jack saw Sam eating with gusto then dug into his. Logan focused on his food as well, giving them a lull in the conversation.

The diner still had a line all the way to the door for the baked goods, and every table remained occupied. Since the change in ownership, the diner became the most popular place for locals. Sam seemed to like the smell of greasy grilled burgers and fresh bread. Thank God.

Jack wiped his mouth. “So did you have a good vacation in D.C.?” Jack asked, before sipping his Coke.

“Yeah, it was good seeing my mother and stepfather,” Sam said.

Logan nodded. “Sam’s mother, Martha, is married to the Russian Ambassador, Dmitri Demas.”

Martha had been over the moon to learn that Samantha was pregnant. Dmitri was even more excited. He’d always had a tender spot for Sam. He loved her as his own. Although Sam had chosen to live with her father in Yellow Springs, she had spent part of her summers growing up in D.C.

“Oh, wow, that’s cool,” Jack said. “Do you know Russian?”

“A few words,” she said. “My mother speaks it fluently. In fact, they’re flying to Russia in a couple days to visit Dmitri’s mother and his sisters.”

“I always wanted to travel,” Jack said, looking at his plate as if surprised it was empty.

“Where would you like to go?” Logan asked, eating his last French fry.

“Anywhere away from here. A fresh start where nobody knows me.”

Before Logan could add his own fantasy getaway, Jack glanced at the front entrance and stiffened. Their relaxing lunch suddenly held a truckload of tension. Sam must have felt it, too. She looked to where Jack was staring. Officer George Biggs, in his mid-fifties, stood in the long line.

Logan had heard Barrett and a few others call him “Biggie,” and understood it referred just as much to his hefty girth as it did his last name. Biggs had joined the police force in Yellow Springs the previous year, giving the town a total of three cops. Logan knew all of this because the gossip chain usually started with Barrett.

Biggs surveyed the room. His eyes stopped at Jack and their table before scanning the rest of the packed diner.

“You haven’t done anything wrong,” Logan said, hoping to ease Jack’s obvious anxiety of law enforcement.

“I know,” Jack said, looking away.

Clearly impatient, Officer Biggs skipped the line and walked straight up to the counter, demanding his order. Irked at Biggs’s attitude, Logan narrowed his eyes. The young waitress-in-training quickly put his order in a bag. Biggs walked out without paying. When he left, all the tension in the room seemed to leave with him. Jack appeared to relax.

“Entitled jerk,” Sam said, tearing up. “Did you see the way he intimidated that poor girl? That makes me so angry.” She balled her hands into fists.

Jack nodded but remained silent. Sam’s maternal instincts must have kicked in. She had become motherly to anyone younger than herself. The teen waitress qualified.

Logan took their bill and slid back his chair. “I’ll be right back.”

He found the spot at the end of the line while Sam and Jack chatted. By the time he got to the counter, the teenage girl returned from the back. Next to her, Donna reassured her. Logan paid and signed the tip on his credit card. He then slipped twenty dollars into the teen’s tip jar next to the register.

Her eyes widened. “Thank you.”

Logan nodded and met his wife and Jack by the entrance. He hoped the teen would focus on the tip rather than on Biggs’s rudeness.

Sam stopped outside the door. “Jack, we’re grilling steaks tomorrow. Would you like to join us?”

Jack smiled. “At your house?”

Sam laughed. “Well, yeah, that’s where our grill is.”

“Sure, and thanks for lunch,” he said, holding out his hand to shake Sam’s. Instead, she gave him a brief hug. Seeming surprised by the gesture, he turned pink.

Logan set his hand on Jack’s shoulder. “See you at noon? You know where we live?”

Jack nodded, shaking Logan’s hand. “Everyone knows where you live.”

They watched Jack walk to his dirty white Olds Cutlass in the parking lot. Sam took Logan’s hand as families passed them on the sidewalk.

“That went well,” Logan said, squeezing her hand. “I didn’t know we were grilling tomorrow.”

“I’m craving more meat like a thick, juicy steak,” Sam said.

“I must have sympathy pains. I crave that, too. And I’m kinda hungry for ice cream now.”

“You’ve read my mind,” she said, smiling.

The Major’s Dilemma Available on AMAZON

Our Passion Project

As parents, aunts, and uncles to a special-needs child, we understand the importance of inclusivity, especially for families with special-needs children.  In Phase 1 of our visionary project, we will ensure that at least seven cabins are ADA-compliant.  Phase 2 will involve the creation of an all-abilities playground and sensory rooms, further emphasizing our commitment to inclusivity.

Our Phase 3 program will be the culmination of our commitment to families with special-needs children.  Our family vacation package will include accessible lodging, farm-to-table meals, a parental support group, and a range of planned activities with the help of a family companion in a safe and relaxed environment.

Our goal will be to strengthen family bonds and reduce stress without putting extra work on the parents. The whole family will be able to relax and enjoy their stay.

Coming Soon—Follow Holiday Retreat Family Camp’s Facebook Page for more information and updates on our visionary project.

Holiday Retreat Family Camp—Coming Soon

I’ve teamed up with my siblings on a project that we believe is God’s purpose for us. We want Holiday Retreat Family Camp to stand as a premier destination campground catering to families with special-needs children seeking nature-based experiences.

Each of us brings different work experiences to enhance this personal project. My sister is a parent to a special-needs child, has a degree in accounting, and has over twenty-five years of experience in customer service. One brother is a U.S.A.F. veteran with a background in law enforcement and business ownership. Our other brother has over twenty-three years of retail and management experience. I have thirty years of experience in customer service. And, I’d like to think I have the writing skills to help promote our mission.

Our inspiration is certainly my nephew Patrick, who has special needs, but it also started over forty years ago.

When we were young, our family went camping every summer. It was horrible. A family of six cramped in a small pop-up camper not getting along. A rusted playground. Pricy add-ons. Extra work for mom. Dad working within a strapped budget. And kids with nothing to do except skip stones and roll in poison ivy.

Drawing inspiration from our own challenging camping experiences as children, Holiday Retreat Family Camp will be founded on the principle of creating a haven for families. Our goal will be to rectify the shortcomings of our childhood camping escapades by offering a fun and stress-free celebration for every family that will grace our campground.

As parents, aunts, and uncles to a special-needs child, we understand the importance of inclusivity, especially for families with special-needs children. In Phase 1 of our visionary project, we will ensure that at least nine cabins are ADA-compliant. Phase 2 will involve the creation of an all-abilities playground and sensory rooms, further emphasizing our commitment to inclusivity.

Our Phase 3 program will be the culmination of our commitment to families with special-needs children. The family vacation package will include accessible lodging, farm-to-table meals, a parental support group, and a range of planned activities with the help of a family companion in a safe and relaxed environment.

Our goal will be to strengthen family bonds and reduce stress without putting extra work on the parents. The whole family will be able to relax and enjoy their stay.

Follow Holiday Retreat Family Camp’s Facebook Page for more information and updates on our visionary project.

Meet my characters in The Chemical Attraction Series

Taylor, Eva, and Joe
Siblings by Choice since Childhood.
Following different Paths after College.
Afraid of Drifting Apart.

* In Their Rigid Rules and The Kindred Code, TAYLOR VALENTINE, a natural beauty, embraces her vanilla tendencies. Her plan for her life reinforces those traits. Kindhearted, she doesn’t apologize for giving people the benefit of the doubt.*

* In Their Rigid Rules, The Kindred Code, and Chemical Attraction, EVA O’SULLIVAN, a petite Irish spitfire with auburn spiral curls, has big opinions, and you know them whether you want to or not. Masking her vulnerability, she wears her willfulness like armor.*

* Akin to Athena, the Goddess of Wisdom, MADELINE PIERCE, a dedicated scientist, has pain in her heart from an abusive relationship. With her Ice Queen persona set, she hides within the realm of her research in Chemical Attraction and Chemical Reaction.*

*As a history professor and former marine, STUART MORGAN, a blond, blue-eyed war hero, battles his inner demons. Although he longs for mental peace from an empathetic woman, his rigid rules prevent it.*

*Ruggedly handsome with a calm demeanor, MATT CONNOR recovers from a gunshot wound obtained while on duty. As a single parent, he pushes any romantic life aside and focuses on raising his eight-year-old son, David.*

*Charismatic yet brooding, JOE ROBERTS is a womanizer on the surface. Deep down, he’s searching for an instant chemistry with his soulmate, the one person who will love him for his faults not in spite of them.*

The Chemical Attraction Series

Dear Dad

Dear Dad,

It’s Veteran’s Day.  Thank you for your sacrifice.  I didn’t understand until recently how much the Korean War affected you.  It had taken your innocence leaving your emotions hardened from the horrors. Would our relationship have been better had I known your torment? 

After reading your letters to your parents during the war, I see the love you had for them, which is why I used my favorite picture of you, your mother, and your dad on the cover.  That’s how I want to remember you.  I will cherish those rare times when you let your guard down—laughing with a lightened heart.  I miss you.

With Love, Christina

“One hundred and twenty Marines wounded. Eighteen dead. All for one lousy hill.”

Corpsman Orrin Connor’s faithful letters with a touching twist shield his parents from the horrors of war. His buddy Rawley Armstrong’s poignant letters give his sister the harrowing truths. Throughout their dangerous assignments during the Korean War, they debate the consequences of their choices. Orrin gains comfort in downplaying his experiences while Rawley feels a healing purge. As they get to know the Marines in their charge, the corpsmen gather a variety of opinions. Although Orrin and Rawley disagree, their friendship remains true until the bitter end.

“It all happened within minutes. For some, it would last a lifetime.”

Based on her father’s letters to his parents throughout the Forgotten War, author Christina Thompson has produced this work of historical fiction to pay tribute to Navy corpsmen by remembering their service to their brothers and their country. Imagining her father had guarded his parents from the carnage of war, Christina elaborates on what could have happened while staying true to the dates and experiences her father shared in his actual letters.

Dearest Mother and Dad on Amazon