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From characters to plot, this story was just right for a summer afternoon with a glass of sweet tea in hand.

Heartbreaking to Heartwarming
The Silver Lining by Audrey Lancho is a small-town women’s fiction novel that explores the quiet heartbreak of losing someone while they’re still living. This story follows Farrah as she navigates moving back home after a “divorce”, rekindling an old flame while losing someone she truly loves and finding her new normal.
Themes and Topics Worth Noting:
- Farming
- Dementia
- Career Change
- Service/Philanthropy
I’ve come to trust almost anything published by Harpeth Road Press. Their books are consistently clean, well-written, and grounded in real-life topics. Always with a soft, small-town touch. That holds true across many of their authors that I have read. As someone who tends to carry other people’s emotions, I need stories that offer hope and warmth without dismissing real struggles. This one struck that balance beautifully.
Audrey took on a heavy, emotional topic, yet handled it with such warmth. It never felt overly dramatic or heavy. Instead, the story met me with just enough romance and small-town charm to keep things feeling light and comforting, even while exploring something many people quietly carry. Myself included, indirectly.
I’m usually not drawn to stories that are emotionally intense. I get enough of that from the news, social media, and life itself. Reading, for me, is a way to step into a softer world. That’s why I’m so grateful for clean fiction like this. Even though The Silver Lining had deeper themes, they were met with the things I find light-hearted and fun- romance, small town charm and interesting career lives- to keep the story moving for me.
The only fault I found was at the beginning. It felt a little slow at first, and I was confused by the subtle hints about what was going on in the background. But once the pieces started falling into place, I was hooked. It’s possible some of that confusion was due to my reading style too, though. I am trying to squeeze in chapters here and there while chasing little ones. I plan to reread it now that I know how it ends, just to catch all the details in the conversations and foreshadowing I may have missed the first time, something I do often and enjoy.
Overall, this was a beautiful, thoughtful read. I’ll be recommending it and revisiting it again soon.
Pick up the book The Silver Lining by Audrey Lancho
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