Book Review: The Breath of Dawn by Kristen Heitzmann

In The Breath of Dawn Kristen Heitzmann has written romantic suspense with captivating characters and a plot that keeps readers in its clutches until the last page.

Female lead Quinn Reilly takes her business of estate buying and eBay trading seriously. But why is this diminutive but determined, independent, conscientious, and caring 27-year-old living alone, and apparently on the run in a doll-house-sized cabin nestled in the mountains near Juniper Falls, Colorado?

Morgan Spencer, whom we see in the prologue roaring away from his infant daughter after his wife’s funeral, has moved from his California business headquarters to the Colorado ranch. There his brother Rick, wife Noelle, and nephew Liam are helping him parent now two-year-old Livie. Morgan is caring too in a professional way as the revitalizer of failing corporations.  But when we meet him, his wooden responses show how emotionally frozen he still is after the deaths of daughter Kelsey and wife Jill.

I really enjoyed two-year-old Livie, an elfin and precocious (in a nice way) two-year-old who acted just like a compliant two-year-old would and completely won my heart (I’m a grandma, after all, with a ‘Livie’ of my own).

Quinn and Morgan meet. There is chemistry between them but the story really heats up when Markham Wilder, a bad actor from Quinn’s past, surfaces after serving jail time because of Quinn’s testimony against him. Heitzmann’s description of Wilder gives me chills:

“He felt like a reptile coming out from under a rock, blinking in the overbright sunshine, cold wind standing his short blond hair. He felt like a predator waking to thoughts of prey, to hunger and awareness. He felt shame. He felt fear. He felt vengeful and powerful.” – Kindle Location 793

Though the book is long (448 pages) the story of the growth of Quinn and Morgan’s relationship woven together with the ever-tightening noose of Quinn’s past kept me reading long into the night more than once. Heitzmann’s masterful use of language and ability to get into the skin of her characters didn’t hurt either.

In addition to spinning a captivating tale, Heitzmann addresses themes of trust (in people and God—beautifully illustrated by little Livie’s trusting qualities), family, prayer, faith and integrity.

The Breath of Dawn under the tree for the reader in your life would be a great treat!

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Article Author: Violet Nesdoly

Violet Nesdoly blogs more book reviews and lots of other stuff at her home on the web.

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