· This is the first time I’ve read a book by Carrie Turansky but it definitely won’t be my last! Across the Blue is a historical fiction set in Edwardian England. Isabella Grayson is a woman ahead of her time. She desperately dreams of becoming a journalist and seeing some of her articles appear in one of the several newspapers her father owns.5/5(11). Across the Blue — Carrie Turansky. Across the Blue. —. Carrie Turansky. Set in Edwardian England and ideal for readers who enjoy Julie Klassen novels, this romance about an English aviation pioneer and . Early aviation history and a love between different social classes combined for a very compelling and page-turning read in Carrie Turansky’s Across the Blue, set in England. Along with the developing romance between newspaper heiress Isabella Grayson and aviation enthusiast James Drake, there were other subplots to the novel which added much interest and mystery/5().
Carrie Turansky's latest novel, Across the Blue is a wonderful tribute to the early aviators as they compete to be the first to cross the English Channel in I was immediately drawn into the story of the friendship that developed between two unlikely people. James Drake, pilot, dreams of being the first to fly across the English Channel. Across the Blue A Novel. Carrie Turansky. $; $; Publisher Description. Set in Edwardian England and ideal for readers who enjoy Julie Klassen novels, this romance about an English aviation pioneer and the girl who falls in love with him is filled with adventure and faith. Across the Blue by Carrie Turansky, , available at Book Depository with free delivery worldwide.
Across the Blue by Carrie Turansky Published by Crown Publishing Group on Febru Genres: Christian, Fiction, General, Historical, Romance Pages: Source: CelebrateLit Amazon|BarnesNoble|Goodreads. Across the Blue, by Carrie Turansky, takes place in in England. Charles Grayson owns three prestigious London newspapers. He has just purchased an estate in the country from Sir Richard and moved his family there. Sir Richard has left furniture and decorations behind and it gives the appearance the Graysons come from old money. Turansky lands a perfectly pious but passionate ending for this pleasing 19th-century romance. (Mar.) Publishers Weekly. Carrie Turansky’s latest novel swept me back a hundred years into the elegant world of a wealthy British family named Grayson and the dangerous mission of an aviator intent on crossing the English Channel with his flying machine.
0コメント