D
EAR
R
EADER
,
Thanks for taking yet another journey with me. Your time is precious, and I appreciate you investing it with me.
The idea for
To Mend a Dream
came while I was writing
To Win Her Favor
(a Belle Meade Plantation novel) and when I first
met
Savannah Darby on the page. Savannah is a secondary character in that novel, but her story and all that she'd been through and endured in her young life spoke to meâand demanded its own story.
I
love stories about hidden things. A hidden letter, message, or treasure. A trinket with a special meaning that's discovered only once the mystery is solved. But I'm so grateful that in Christ nothing is hidden.
He sees everything. Both the good and the bad in all of us. There's no use pretending with Him. In fact, pretending with Him is really only pretending with yourself. I firmly believe in God's master plan in our lives and in how He weaves our lives in and out of one another's, like He did with Jake, Aidan, and Savannah.
If you're hurting right now and are wondering if Jesus sees you, rest assured that He does. And He not only sees you, He's working for your eternal good this very moment, working in details of your life He has yet to reveal to you, and that you may never know about until we reach Home. But trust Him. He's working.
As Proverbs 16:9 says, “We can make our plans, but the Lord determines our steps” (
NLT
). And aren't we grateful He does?
For you baking enthusiasts, I'm including the recipe for Savannah's Truly Southern Peach Cobbler featured in the story. This really is like the “good ol' days” cobbler my granny Agnes Preston Gattis used to make. Hope you enjoy!
I'd love to hear from you! Let's connect through one of the venues listed on my About the Author page.
Until next time . . .
Tamera Alexander
Thanks to my fellow Southern authorsâDorothy, Shelley, and Elizabethâfor partnering with me in this collection. I'm honored
to call you ladies colleagues . . . and friends. My thanks also to my HarperCollins publishing team. What a pleasure it is to work with each of you. Continued gratitude to Deborah Raney, my critique partner for over a dozen years now, for sharing her talent and laughter with me, and to the Coeur d'Alene ladies for brainstorming this novella during last summer's five days of “plotting, praying, and praying.” I look forward to our time together all year. To Jerry Trescott, bless you for sharing your extensive knowledge of architectural history. To Natasha Kern, my literary agent, you're simply the best! And thank
you
, dear reader, for taking these journeys with me. Your enthusiasm and eagerness to read is such an encouragement to me as I'm writing. I always love hearing from you.
Finally, thanks to Dr. Michael Easley, one of our pastors at Fellowship Bible Church, for his oft-repeated phrase, “Don't let the world teach you theology.” Oh, so true. Never judge God's faithfulness by your present circumstances, friend. Instead, trust God who is faithful no matter the circumstance. He's always working for your eternal good. And if you've trusted in His Son, Jesus, then you can trust thatâno matter what happens in this lifeâthe best is
always
yet to come.
1. Savannah Darby lost most of her family, her home, and like many Southerners following the Civil War, was forced to leave everything behind when family land went to auction. What family treasureâa portrait, diary, special possession, perhapsâwould you miss most if forced to leave behind your home and belongings?
2. Prejudice was a theme in
To Win Her Favor
, the Belle Meade Plantation novel in which we first meet Savannah Darby. What prejudices are evident in Aidan and Savannah's story? Are those still prevalent today? How so? And do you struggle with them?
3. If given the chance to get back into a home that had been legally taken from you, do you think you would have made the same decision as Savannah? Do you think her search for what her father left was right or wrong? Why?
4. Aidan's motivation in moving to Nashville is guided by what happened when he met the Confederate
soldier one afternoon during the lull of battle. Are you aware that this really happened in the Civil War? That Union soldiers and Confederate soldiers would converse between
battles? In what ways do you think these meetings changed these men?
5. Have you ever experienced a “chance meeting” (like Aidan and Nashville) and yet knew deep down that chance had nothing to do with it? Share your experience.
6. Savannah treasures a family letter in the story. Letter writing is all but a lost art these days. Would having a letter from a departed loved one have meant more back then, do you think? Why or why not?
7. In
chapter 12
, Savannah reflects on the many possessions she and her family owned. With time's passing, her perspective on those has changed. How has it changed? And can you relate to her feelings?
8. God worked to weave Aidan's and Savannah's lives together in ways they couldn't see and certainly didn't plan. Have you ever made a plan that you thought was a good one, only to have God intervene and make it even better? Share your experience, and also your thoughts on Proverbs 16:9.
T
AMERA LOVES TO
S
KYPE
/F
ACETIME WITH BOOK CLUBS WHO
are reading her books. Visit Tamera's website (www.TameraAlexander.com) for more information on inviting her to join your group and for recipes from all her novels.
S
AVANNAH
'
S
T
RULY
S
OUTHERN
P
EACH
C
OBBLER
What you'll need:
. 12â15 fresh peaches, peeled and sliced (about 15â16 cups) (You can use frozen peaches if fresh aren't in season, but you'll likely need to drain off some of the extra syrup. You can gauge that as you're spooning it into the dish.)
. 1/3 cup all-purpose flour
. 3 cups sugar (Yes, diabetics beware! But if you're counting calories and carbs, stevia works wonderfully with this recipe.)
. 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
. 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
. 2/3 cup real butter (Please, no margarine, the southern cook in me begs of you.)
. 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
. 2 old-fashioned pie crusts (recipe below) OR 2 refrigerated pie crusts may be substituted if you really don't love your family and friends (Just kidding. You love them. Just not enough to make homemade, bless your heart.)
. 1/2 cup finely chopped pecans, toasted (Toasting pecans is easy. Chop finely, spread on a cookie sheet sprayed with oil, then bake for 4â5 minutes at 350°F. Watch so they don't burn.)
. 5 tablespoons sugar, divided
. sweetened whipped cream
Now comes the fun part:
If you're making your dough from scratch (which is best and so
easy!), make your pie crust dough first and stick it (flattened according to instructions) in the fridge to chill for 15â20 minutes.
Stir together peaches, flour, 3 cups sugar, nutmeg, and cinnamon in a Dutch oven. Bring to a boil over medium heat, reduce to low heat, and simmer for 8â10 minutes. Remove from heat, gently fold in butter and vanilla (and somehow resist eating the entire pot). Spoon half of the mixture into a lightly greased 13 à 9-inch baking dish. Preheat oven to 475°F.
Take your two homemade pie crustsâor for those of you who don't love your friends and families as much, unroll the two store-bought pie crusts (she says with sweet Southern sass)âand roll to a 14 à 10-inch rectangle. Sprinkle 1/4 cup toasted pecans and 2 tablespoons sugar over the first pie crust. Place pastry over peach mixture in dish, trimming sides to fit the baking dish. Bake at 475°F for 20â25 minutes or until
lightly
browned.
Meanwhile, roll your second crust to a 14 Ã 10-inch rectangle (or unroll the second pie crust). Sprinkle 2 tablespoons sugar and remaining 1/4 cup toasted pecans over the piecrust as you did the first one. Next, cut into one-inch strips with a knife. If you want to get fancy, use a fluted pastry wheel, but you don't get extra jewels in your crown.