


I, for one, wouldn’t have paired an Alaska love story with a woman doing under-cover detective work, but I couldn’t put this book down! What I really like about Tracie’s writing is how she can craft a story set in nature’s beauty, bring in an interesting piece of history and wrap it up with a Biblical theme. I won’t give the story away, but I’ll say this: if you like a little suspense in a plot that will last longer than the first book, get a copy of “Summer of the Midnight Sun!” When you finish the book, the plot thickens even more and leaves you on a cliffhanger. When all four meet up in Nome, Alaska – things get interesting. by the name of Helaina Beecham, who worked with the Pinkerton’s National Detective Agency, began her journey north to track down a deadly killer responsible for the death of two of the agency’s men. While Jacob Barringer is helping his friend Jayce Kincaid prepare for an Arctic Expedition and possibly win the hand of his sister, a young widow from Washington D.C. Instead of just one romance, we enjoy two in this story. What a coincidence that the man who broke her heart shows up on her doorstep ready to marry the woman he spurned ten years ago. It’s 1915 and at the age of thirty, Leah is still single and suffering from a heart broken ten years earlier. They’re single adults now, living on the coast of the Berring Sea near Last Chance Creek in the Alaska Territory.

“Summer of the Midnight Sun” is the story of Leah Barringer and her brother Jacob, who both appeared in Peterson’s Yukon Quest Series. Stanley’s In Touch Alaska Cruise, I’ve taken an interest in stories set in that area of the world and this is one that did not disappoint. After visiting the Inside Passage last summer on Dr.

Two of the Alaskan stories are her Yukon Quest and Alaskan Quest Series. To me, Tracie Peterson is known for writing about the northern regions of our country, but especially Alaska. It was one that became available for free on Kindle a while back and I couldn’t resist the download. This book released in 2006, but it’s a new discovery to me. Recently, I finished reading Tracie Peterson’s “Summer of the Midnight Sun,” book #1 in the Alaskan Quest Series. Every story has an end, but when an author takes the people around the main character in one book/series and develops their own story in another, we get to enjoy the characters we’ve grown to love a little longer. I don’t know about you, but I love a good spin-off series.
