
About the Book
Book: River of Peril
Author: Sandra Merville Hart
Genre: Christian Historical Romance
Release date: October 15, 2024

Amnesia stole his memory, and now he’s fighting for the wrong side.
Orphaned and alone at sixteen, Felicity has found solace in serving others as a volunteer nurse. When she discovers her Confederate soldier beau, Luke Shea, among the wounded in her ward, her worst nightmares come true. Luke’s shrapnel wound has stolen his memory, leaving him with no recollection of their love or his past. As Felicity struggles with the loss of the man she once knew, she turns her attention to the service of her broken country. But the more she learns about the brutal war, the more she realizes she can no longer stay silent. She becomes a Union spy, plunging herself into danger.
When Luke Shae awakes in a hospital with no memory of the last five years, he’s shocked to learn he’s been fighting against the Union he once so strongly supported. And when he learns of his past courtship with his nurse, Felicity, he struggles to understand the man he was and what happened in those missing years. Determined to atone for his Confederate past, Luke also joins the Union cause as a spy.
As danger lurks at every turn, only a Divine hand can not only protect their lives, but give them a second chance for love and the future they both crave.
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About the Author

Sandra Merville Hart, award-winning and Amazon bestselling author of inspirational historical romances, loves to discover little-known yet fascinating facts from American history to include in her stories. Her desire is to transport her readers back in time. She is also a blogger, speaker, and conference teacher.
More from Sandra
“History will never know how indebted it is to folks like you in ending the war.” ~ River of Peril
People spied on their government, their soldiers, and their neighbors during the Civil War. Union spies in the South lived dangerously. Everyday citizens, including enslaved and free black spies, became heroes to speed the war’s end.
Secret messages were sewn into hems, vests, and coats. Cyphered messages were hidden in bodices, hoop skirts, trees, hats, styled hair, books, custard dishes, hollowed-out eggs, and even in vaults with a dead body. Raised/lowered shades and clothes hanging on a line might also be clues for spies.
Some spies were already actors. Others disguised themselves to deliver secrets and to protect their identity. There were female spies who disguised themselves as men. If they could manage to remain anonymous, it saved them from their neighbors’ retaliation during and after the war. This was especially true in the South because the North emerged as victorious.
Many spies were caught during the Civil War and often imprisoned for days or weeks, up to a year. Confederate spies could sign an Oath of Allegiance to the United States to be released from Union prisons. Both sides executed spies.
For reasons already discussed, history doesn’t record most of Mississippi’s spies. Two Mississippi spies, Robbie Woodruff and Philip Henson, didn’t slip into obscurity.
Robbie Woodruff was a courageous farm girl who fetched Confederate messages from town and hid them in a hollow stump for couriers. Philip Henson, one of the Union army’s greatest spies living in the South, was captured and imprisoned for several months.
Key characters are spies for the Union in River of Peril, Book 5 in my Spies of the Civil War Series. The spies in my Vicksburg portion of the series (Books 4 – 6) are fictional. The stories show the type of challenges faced by historical spies.
My research for this novel began with a trip to Vicksburg, Mississippi. I was greatly inspired by the battlefield, the museums, and the people in the historic city. That inspiration—and a whole lot of research!—led to the writing of Streams of Courage, Book 4, River of Peril, Book 5, and Tides of Healing, Book 6.
Avenue of Betrayal, Book 1, is set in the Union capital of Washington City (Washington DC) in 1861, where a surprising number of Confederate sympathizers and spies lived. Boulevard of Confusion and Byway to Danger are set in Richmond, the Confederate capital in 1862. Actual historical spies touch the lives of our fictional family. The heroines in Books 1 – 3 are two sisters and their cousins. Another set of characters begin with Book 4, and three friends are the heroines in Books 4 -6.
Through both real and fictional characters, this series highlights activities spies were involved in and some of the motives behind their decisions.
I invite you to read the whole Spies of the Civil War Series!
My Impressions
“Sadness filled him. There could be no feelings between a man with no memories and a woman who knew them all.”
While volunteer nurse Felicity Danielson is relieved to be reunited with her Confederate soldier beau, Luke Shea, in the early Civil War years, she finds Luke has returned changed. Author Sandra Merville Hart’s River of Peril, book 5 of Spies of the Civil War series needs to be read in order, so there are no spoilers for other books. Also, you will enjoy seeing friends from book four again, finding out more of their story.
Luke has returned with a head injury, which causes amnesia. He cannot remember anything that has happened in the last five years. Unfortunately, that means while he remembers his friends he knew before he was injured, he doesn’t remember that he is Felicity’s beau or a few other essential facts to his current life.
With everyone hoping to jar Luke’s memory, can Felicity hope he does not regain his memory as a way of saving him? How do Luke’s and Felicity’s political leanings lead to a dangerous life for each? When she realizes she no longer has Luke’s love, her co-worker at the hospital proves difficult, and her family situation changes, Felicity feels like Job. “Where are you, God? It’s just You and me. Alone, as always. That seems to be my lot in life.” Surprisingly, it’s often when we feel most alone that we turn more of our attention to and reliance on God. These hard times are often the best times of growth. Will Felicity discover this to be true?
I loved the fact that Felicity, in her pain, grief, and despair, is reminded that even her feeble prayers are powerful. “Yet prayer was a powerful thing because of the one who listened and answered.” Prayer is not dependent on us, but on the faithfulness of the One to Whom we are praying.
I enjoyed reading about the historical aspects of the War and felt like I was in the middle of the besieged city, smelling the smoke, hearing and feeling the earth tremble by way of the cannon balls, and feeling the hunger and thirst. And… wondering who to trust, in a city full of uncertainty.
I received a copy of the book from Celebrate Lit. I also bought my own copy. No positive review was required, and all opinions are my own.
Notable Quotables:
“She believed in him more than he believed in himself.”
“more bound the opposing sides than separated them.”
“’Tis a burden to me, losing five years of me life. I feel less a man.”
“How had he ended up fighting for the Confederacy when he supported the Union?”
My Rating
Great! I enjoy learning about spies of the Civil War with Sandra Merville Hart!
Blog Stops
Babbling Becky L’s Book Impressions, October 16
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, October 17
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, October 18
Devoted To Hope, October 18
Happily Managing a Household of Boys, October 19
Texas Book-aholic, October 20
Locks, Hooks and Books, October 21
CONNIE’S HISTORY CLASSROOM, October 22
Betti Mace, October 23
For Him and My Family, October 24
Holly’s Book Corner, October 25
Pause for Tales, October 26
Cover Lover Book Review, October 27
Life on Chickadee Lane, October 28
Jodie Wolfe – Stories Where Hope and Quirky Meet, October 29 (Author Interview)
Mary Hake, October 29
Giveaway

To celebrate her tour, Sandra is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Amazon card!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.