Read Online The Protective Patriot Georgia Patriots Romance edition by Sarah Gay Religion Spirituality eBooks

By Carey Massey on Friday, May 24, 2019

Read Online The Protective Patriot Georgia Patriots Romance edition by Sarah Gay Religion Spirituality eBooks





Product details

  • File Size 1411 KB
  • Print Length 131 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publication Date March 17, 2019
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B07PSH32KG




The Protective Patriot Georgia Patriots Romance edition by Sarah Gay Religion Spirituality eBooks Reviews


  • This was an excellent book. Sarah keeps you involved from page one until the end. I enjoyed this book very much.
  • This was a good read for me, however, there was no epilogue - and I'm an epilogue kind of reader. I would have liked to find out what happened to them a few years since the book ended. There were some unanswered questions.
  • The Protective Patriot is by Sarah Gay. This is a cute book about finding love in the most unusual places and times. It is also about abuse and finding ways to help someone in an abusive situation. Most of all it is a wonderful clean love story.
    Librarian Tessa is happy with her life. She has her job and a great family and lots of friends. However, she has had to deal with cysts on her ovaries which were so bad they had to remove her ovaries. Thus, she was not able to have her own children. She had convinced herself that not marrying was OK too. She had her job and lots of kids came into her life through the library. One little girl was extra special, her name was Rey. She came in after school and stayed until her Mom got off work. She was a ray of sunshine in the library. Her Mom was saving enough money to leave her abusive husband; but it would still be a while.
    Miles had been picked up by the patriots and was in Atlanta to find a house, a school for his little sisters, and a job for his triplet Mason. His twin Max was staying with the Titans. They were splitting up for the first time in their lives. It would be an experience. Miles came by the library to be introduced at a presentation of a new charter school which Mason would be principal of and which his sisters would attend.
    As he was flirting with Tessa, a man came running in yelling about a shooter. Miles pulled the man, who happened to be a doctor, back out with him to attend to the woman who was shot while he dealt with the shooter. The man had shot his wife, threatened to shoot Tessa, and ran. He was Rey’s father. At the hospital, Evonne told the doctors as well as Miles and Tessa that she wanted them to have Rey if something happened to her in surgery. The detective on the case suggested they get married to avoid any legal problems. Events are happening so fast, what will they do?
  • The characters were endearing and the romance sweet, but the pace of the novel felt off to me. Most of the action takes place within three days, including the marriage, and the characters rarely have time to get to know anything about each other. Love at first sight is all well and good, but I like it too be backed by a little more substance in order for it to feel believable. They had serious issues to face, but even at the big denouement, they still hadn't talked together about things aside from saying they didn't matter. I lost my emotional connection about 3/4 of the way through. This could have been a great book if there had been more to it.
  • This is a refreshingly sweet and honest look at the unexpected and amazing gift we can make get when we least expected and how those blessings can touch many more lives with their endearing and unconditional love.
  • I love reading about good men and women with integrity. Characters who are unselfish. I enjoy reading how they overcome their past and their insecurities. I loved reading about Tessa and Miles. Such great chemistry. The Moore family certainly has my attention! Great but realistic characters. I loved the story of how they met and got married!
  • I guess it was a good idea,but the carry out was awful. The events that occurred were completely absurd. No one buys a facility, gets the purchase completed, gets permits for a shelter with all the inspections done and government agencies and regulations satisfied, has it furnished and the first woman and child moved in, in just a week. I don't card now much money you throw at it, it can't be done . There was also no conflict to build the story around and the characters were predictable and flat. Besides, who would settle for a Honda Accord when you can buy any car you want, even if you are ecologically minded and expense aware. Not that Affords are lousy cars, they are great, but still...
  • Following an unexpected removal of her ovaries Tessa believed no man would want to marry a woman who couldn't have children. Becoming the dowdy librarian with fake dark rimmed glasses was the step she took to prove to the world she was an undesirable. The problem was she loved the children that came in for story hour, especially Rey. Let's mom was brutally attacked by her ex. A passerby, Miles Moore was able assist in catching him, making him not only the football hero but the local hero. As Rey' s mother's condition deteriorated she named Tessa and Miles as guardians for her daughter to protect her from her home ex. Being thrown together they had to make immediate plans for a future with some secrets neither was open to disclosing.