Becky Lewis's Reviews > Ambush in the Mountains

Ambush in the Mountains by Mary Alford
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“Summer …wished she could erase the things that were forever imprinted in her heart, keeping her from experiencing anything close to a human emotion again. But she couldn’t. She was damaged beyond repair. “

Mary Alford. To me, a name synonymous with fast-moving, heart-thumping romantic suspense, generally involving Amish and Englischers. Ambush in the Mountains lives up to Alford’s reputation, but in this novel, Alford is also tackling a very tough social injustice: human trafficking. I loved that there is a trigger warning at the beginning.

I could not imagine! I have lived through a few blizzards in my lifetime, but never have I been in Summer’s position! Running out into a superstorm, 8 months pregnant, knowing that getting caught means certain death. I could imagine every bump and jar as Summer and Axel traversed the blizzard-swept countryside, though! How can Summer and Axel keep looking for alternate ways of escape as each one gets thwarted? How do they have the energy, courage, stamina, and ability to think clearly in those situations? And, because of a very real fear, they have no one else to turn to. “Was Summer right about not trusting the cops? If that was true, who could they go to for help... No one. They were on their own.”

Axel is the perfect foil for Summer. As a former soldier, he, too, knows what it means to be hunted, where one slip-up could cost him his life. Now he is responsible for at least three. Yet, he is so kind and thoughtful, never putting himself first.

Don’t forget the former K-9 soldier! While the Malinois seems very dangerous and dedicated to keeping his master safe at all cost, Camo trusts Summer immediately. God gives animals a sixth sense and it is great to see how this bears out in Alford’s book. I am pretty sure I love Camo just as much as Summer and Axel.

I loved that Axel realizes that one of Summer’s deep needs is to be seen as not only worth, but free from fault in the horrible events that had happened to her. I also loved that Summer isn’t willing to stay a victim. “I hate that word.” She scraped her hair back from her face. “Even though I am a victim, I don’t want to feel like one.” She touched her belly. “This little one needs me not to be a victim.” Such courage! And Alford shows many times where Summer and Axel’s courage comes from. There are many desperate prayers to a God they know and love.

Get your copy of Ambush in the Mountains today! Maybe you’ll be as shocked as I was by one of the twists!

I received a copy of the book from Just Reads. I also bought my own ecopy. No positive review was required, and all opinions are my own.
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Reading Progress

July 20, 2024 – Shelved
July 20, 2024 – Shelved as: to-read
July 23, 2024 – Started Reading
July 23, 2024 – Shelved as: justread-publicity-tours
July 23, 2024 – Shelved as: christian-romantic-suspense
July 23, 2024 – Shelved as: christian-mystery
July 23, 2024 – Shelved as: christian-contemporary
July 23, 2024 – Shelved as: read-in-2024
July 23, 2024 – Shelved as: purchase
July 23, 2024 – Shelved as: love-inspired-suspense
July 23, 2024 – Shelved as: kindle
July 24, 2024 – Finished Reading

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