About the Sky King Ranch series
Meet the boys of Sky King Ranch! The Kingston brothers are back in town, and you can read their stories in the Sky King Ranch series books Sunrise, Sunburst, and Sundown by USA Today bestselling author Susan May Warren.
About book one: Sunrise
- Series; Sky King Ranch
- Christian Fiction / Romance
- Publisher: Revell
- SCROLL DOWN FOR GIVEAWAY!
Sunrise: (Publication Date: January 4, 2022, 352 pgs) Pilot Dodge Kingston has always been the heir to Sky King Ranch. But after a terrible family fight, he left to become a pararescue jumper. A decade later, he’s headed home to the destiny that awaits him.
Praise for the entire series:
- “Warren proves yet again why she is a master in the genre.”–Booklist, starred review on Sunrise
- “International intrigue and adventure paired with a simmering romance equals one fast-moving story you won’t be able to put down!”–Lisa Harris, bestselling author of the Nikki Boyd Files series, on Sunburst
Buy, read, and discuss this book (or the others in the series):
Baker Publishing Group | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | IndieBound | Christianbook.com | LifeWay | Other Baker Publishing Affiliates | Goodreads
About the author, Susan May Warren
Susan May Warren is the USA Today bestselling author of nearly 90 novels with more than 1.5 million books sold, including the Global Search and Rescue and the Montana Rescue series, as well as Sunrise and Sunburst. Winner of a RITA Award and multiple Christy and Carol Awards, as well as the HOLT Medallion and numerous Readers’ Choice Awards, Susan makes her home in Minnesota.
Connect with Susan:
Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Amazon | Goodreads | BookBub
My Thoughts
I’m always excited to read the first book of a series, especially when I know at least one sequel is already available. Jumping into Susan may Warren’s Sky King Ranch series with the first book, Sunrise, was the start of a wonderful adventure, that – in this case Alaska – made me want to jump on a plane and visit (though maybe not in winter). In fact, the only real problem I had with this novel was that a plane ticket was not included.
All gushing aside, I was completely hooked from the beginning of this novel to the end. While the focus of this novel is on Dodge Kingston, unwillingly returning to run things while his father cannot, the story is as much about the female lead, Echo, his childhood friend and former girlfriend, herself a rugged Alaskan in her own right, working as a musher (dog sledder) and researcher. It’s also the story of her friend Peyton, in Alaska on a grant to research wolves.
As this is a romance-adventure, I expected it to exist in a heightened reality where the men are more rugged and the women are more daring than people tend to be outside the pages of fiction, and I was not wrong. Heroic actions are frequent, even as the characters – especially Dodge – are adamant that they are not heroes. Still everything was grounded in the kind of emotional truth that makes even the most reluctant reader willing to suspend disbelief. For me, there wasn’t much suspension required, but that’s probably because I grew up on PBS nature films and am addicted to shows like Gator Boys and The Amazing Race, and follow alligator wrestlers and bear wranglers on Instagram.
The romance part of this novel was brilliantly handled. Dodge and Echo (I love that name) have a rocky past, but neither ever got over the other, and watching them take two steps forward and one step back for most of the meaty three hundred sixty-eight pages of this book was both heartwarming and frustrating – often simultaneously. I really liked that they had issues and tried to deal with them rather than just falling into old patterns, and I felt their relationship with each other and with their respective friends and families really grounded the story, so that bush piloting, dog care, and other danger-fraught situations felt plausible within the world of the novel.
As an animal lover and conservationist, I was as interested in the parts of the book about bears and wolves, as well as the tribulations of owning livestock that is at risk from several kinds of wild animal, as I was in the romance and adventure, and author Warren did an excellent job of integrating the flora and fauna of Alaska into her plot.
This book is marketed as a Christian romance, and as someone who does not identify as Christian, I was concerned that it would feel preachy. Rest assured that it does not. Mentions of faith are organic and feel true to the characters, and struggles with faith are handled honestly. I feel that readers of any background will enjoy this book, and I’m personally looking forward to the next two in the series.
Overall, Sunrise is a masterfully written novel with the perfect balance of sizzling romance and gritty outdoorsy adventure.
Goes well with: venison stew, cooked over an open fire.
Giveaway
GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY!
ONE WINNER:
Receives a set of the Sky King Ranch Books &
Northern Nights of Alaska Necklace.
(US only; ends midnight, 12/09/22.)
Check Out the Other Great Participants on This Tour
Visit THE LONESTAR LITERARY LIFE TOUR PAGE for direct links to each post on this tour (updated daily), or visit each blog directly.
11/29/22 | All the Ups and Downs | Series Spotlight |
11/29/22 | Hall Ways Blog | BONUS Promo |
11/30/22 | It’s Not All Gravy | Review Book 3 |
11/30/22 | Stories Under Starlight | BONUS Review Bk 1 |
11/30/22 | LSBBT Blog | BONUS Promo |
12/01/22 | Shelf Life Blog | Review Book 2 |
12/02/22 | Bibliotica | Review Book 1 |
12/03/22 | Carpe Diem Chronicles | Excerpt, Book 1 |
12/04/22 | StoreyBook Reviews | Excerpt, Book 2 |
12/05/22 | Sybrina’s Book Blog | Excerpt, Book 3 |
12/06/22 | The Book’s Delight | Review Book 1 |
12/07/22 | Reading by Moonlight | Review Book 2 |
12/08/22 | The Plain-Spoken Pen | Review Book 3 |
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