Bretta's Business
Bretta's Business just published Tuesday. It's an intriguing story of a woman who owns her own construction business in Wyoming in 1889. Although she learned the business from her father, he's not very supportive of her independence or her interest in the women's rights movement. Bretta hasn't even been able to find any help who's willing to work for a woman until Alec Peterson shows up for an interview. The newspaper had misprinted her name as Brett Shaw, and Alec thinks she's a man. However, he agrees to take the job on a trial basis. Now, why does she get the impression he's hiding something?
The novel has a little mystery and suspense as well as a slow-developing romance. It's a sweet story that has a couple of twists along the way. It's the second book I've written in The Suffrage Spinisters series. Ingrid's Intention, my first book, has gotten some great reviews, and I'm hoping Bretta's Business does just as well if not better.
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