Despite her training as a master violinist, Rebekah Carrington was denied entry into the Nashville Philharmonic by young conductor Nathaniel Whitcomb, who bowed to public opinion. Now, with a reluctant muse and a recurring pain in his head, he needs her help to finish his symphony. But how can he win back her trust when he's robbed her of her dream?
Book Review:
Yes, Yes, and Yes. This was such a satisfying read. I was worried before I started because the only other Tamera Alexander book that I've read, I didn't finish because of content. But I tried again because this author comes highly recommend by a friend of mine. Oh it was a winner. Totally clean and really really great characters. I have this thing for music books, and it just kills be how music was thought of as unfeminine and too rigorous. I knew this from previous regency reads, but I didn't ever equate it with American culture (which was stupid, I should have, but all my regency books are in England...so it never occurred to me).
Sometimes I wanted the story to go faster, but it could have been that I was reading it on my kindle and not a hard copy. I like actual books so I know and can anticipate length and where I'm at in the story. I have a harder time doing that on e-books. It also could have been that I really liked the story and wanted to get to it (I'm weird that way....I like to hurry through a book and get the meat of it, and then go back and reread and enjoy all the little things about it).
Anyway, I would completely recommend this book, and I can't wait to read it again :)
Title: A Note Yet Unsung
Author: Tamera Alexander
Publisher: Bethany House
Published: January 2017
ISBN: 0764206249
Source: I received a copy from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
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