About the Book
Book: Shaded Goodness
Author: Kathleen J. Robison
Genre: Romantic Suspense
Release Date: June 10, 2025
Jacquie Dupre has worked tirelessly to give her daughter, Destiny, a future free from the mistakes of her past. But when Mickey, her ex-husband returns to Bay Town, her carefully built world begins to crumble. He claims he’s changed. He’s conquered his addiction that destroyed too many lives, but can Jacquie believe him? As old wounds resurface and a dangerous figure from their past threatens their fragile peace, Jacquie must confront her deepest fears—about Mickey, about love, and about God. Can faith truly heal, can goodness prevail, or will their future be forever shaded by their past?
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My Review
Robison knows how to craft a compelling story. Here she explores the ramifications of past actions as well as the life changing reality of forgiveness. She does not sugar coat relationships but rather shows them in all of their tensions. She also includes a clear presentation of the gospel and how accepting it changes lives.
The characters are well developed although I had a little trouble liking Jacquie. While a believer, her behavior was a bit rude, caustic and harsh. Granted, she had been deeply hurt but some of her behavior was from her culture, I think.
Robison explores the devastation drugs can bring. She includes adults battling to stay free and young people being caught up in the pressure to take them. There is suspense along the way with a good dose of it near the end. As is the case with Robison's novels, one should have a box of tissues close by when approaching the end. This is another heart warming novel of God's grace and mercy.
My rating: 4/5 stars.
You can read my reviews of the earlier books in this series: Shattered Guilt, Restored Grace, Shadowed Doubt, and Ransomed Peace.
About the Author
Kathleen J. Robison weaves tales that inspire a walk of faith and a reliance on God’s guidance through life’s trials. With endearing characters, her stories are a testament to the resilience of broken lives, revived through hope and renewed through God’s grace. Kathleen and her husband call Southern California home residing near the beach and find their most joy in the company of their nineteen and counting grandchildren.
More from Kathleen
Have you ever heard of a Shoofly? The word conjures up an annoying, buzzing insect, but a Shoofly is a magnificent white, wooden, raised gazebo-like structure built around giant oaks and sycamore trees. Back in the 1800s, in the south, they elegantly dotted the coastline of Mississippi. Almost every vacation boarding house boasted one. A relaxing venue for people to gather while avoiding the large horse flies that tended to hover closer to the ground, pestering guests and residents. The raised platform also allowed guests to enjoy the ocean breezes on sweltering hot summer days. Sounds romantic, doesn’t it? Unfortunately, due to storms, hurricanes, and erosion, Shooflys all but disappeared in the 1900s. Yet in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, the setting of my Bay Town Books, you can visit a Shoofly today in the local park downtown. In 1989, a group of town women decided to resurrect the nostalgic structure and had one built. It was completed nearly one hundred years after the near extinction of most of the iconic Shooflys along the Gulf Coast. It’s a key setting in my book, Shaded Goodness.Recently, my childhood friend returned to visit Bay St. Louis. I asked him to take a picture of the Shoofly, and his wife took the shot above of him waving from the deck. He remembers visiting my family in Bay St. Louis sixty years ago, and he said it still has the charm and hasn’t changed or grown much. Except that it’s now an artisan’s dream! Can you imagine? I can. It’s why I set my romantic suspense series in the fictional setting of Bay Town, inspired by Bay St. Louis. Shaded Goodness is the last in the book series.“You got to forgive him, Jacquie. And no, I haven’t seen him. But I have been talking to Pastor Roland, and it’s a dark spot, one of many in my soul.”
“Dark spots? Is that what you call ’em?” Jacquie threw up her hands. “I can’t even go there. That man killed –”
Themes of forgiveness, second chances, and redemption are woven throughout Shaded Goodness. It was a joy to write because the male protagonist in this book was inspired by the character of my deceased ex-brother-in-law. Shaded Goodness is entirely fictional, but I loved using Mickey’s good traits to craft his character. He was a truly good soul who sadly made poor choices throughout his life. I like to think that if he had lived long enough, his life might have turned out like Mickey’s in this book, happily ever after. That’s why I enjoyed writing this story, as it allowed me to give Mickey a life of redemption here on earth, and I’m grateful that he’s living it in eternity. His love for the Lord in his last years proved contagious, just like his Christ-indwelling goodness. All glory to the Lord.
I pray for my readers that, as in all my books, you will be encouraged in your faith. That’s why I like writing about second chances and reconciliation. Because God is all about that, isn’t he? The Bay Town Series is a collection of stand-alone books. Still, the returning characters, after facing their own troubles and tragedies, help their neighbors as they face similar trials. 2 Corinthians 1:4-5 instructs us to do just that. Some characters choose the right path, and some don’t, just like in real life. But God’s promised hope is extended to all.
Shaded Goodness comes full circle from book one. Melanie Thompson Brooks champions through tragedy in the prequel and in Shattered Guilt. Her growth enables her to serve as the guiding voice to Jacquie Dupree in Shaded Goodness. With similar backgrounds, the pain of their pasts threatens to unravel their future. You won’t need to read Shattered Guilt, Book One, to enjoy Shaded Goodness, Book Five, but I think you’ll want to go back and get to know the lovely people of Bay Town through Restored Grace (First Place in the National Excellence in Writing competition), Shadowed Doubt, and Ransomed Peace. I think you’ll find some good friends and wish they really were your neighbors.
I hope you’ll fall in love with the setting where I lived for a short time as a child. It’s why I set my books in the deep south of Mississippi. Where life was slower, and the small-town community came together for events and rallied and prayed for one another during difficulties, much like the body of Christ should. Come on down to Bay Town; it just may become home.
Blog Stops
Book Reviews From an Avid Reader, August 26
Stories By Gina, August 27 (Author Interview)
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, August 28
Simple Harvest Reads, August 29 (Author Interview)
Artistic Nobody, August 30 (Author Interview)
Fiction Book Lover, August 30
Guild Master, August 31 (Author Interview)
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, September 1
Tell Tale Book Reviews, September 2 (Author Interview)
Texas Book-aholic, September 3
Blossoms and Blessings, September 4 (Author Interview)
For Him and My Family, September 5
Jodie Wolfe – Stories Where Hope and Quirky Meet, September 6 (Author Interview)
A Reader’s Brain , September 7 (Author Interview)
Happily Managing a Household of Boys, September 7
A Modern Day Fairy Tale, September 8 (Author Interview)
Giveaway
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/00adcf54285
(My star ratings: 5-I love it, 4-I like it, 3-It's OK, 2-I don't like it, 1-I hate it.)






6 comments:
This looks like an exhilarating read. Thanks for sharing.
Sounds like a book I will enjoy reading.
Sounds riveting
Thanks for sharing that Kathleen.
I like the description of Shoofly.
Do you have a favorite space to do your writing?
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