Christy Awards Finalists 2023 – General Fiction + Young Adult

What are the Christy Awards?

The Christy Award is destined to nurture creativity and quality in the writing and publishing of fiction written from a Christian worldview and showcase the diversity of genres. These 2023 finalists are books published in 2022. 

How does this giveaway work?

You select ONE of the General Fiction OR Young Adult finalists you would like to receive if your name is drawn. Mention the title in a comment. If you win that’s the book that will be sent to you. Easy Peasy. Here are the finalists. (I have provided links to my reviews of the books I have read.)

GENERAL FICTION

By Way of the Moonlight by Elizabeth Musser (Bethany House)

Two courageous young women, tied together by blood and shared passion, will risk everything to save what they love most.

For as long as she can remember, Allie Massey, a gifted physical therapist, has dreamed of making her grandparents’ ten-acre estate into a trauma recovery center using equine therapy—a dream her grandmother, Nana Dale, embraced wholeheartedly. But when her grandmother’s will is read, Allie is shocked to learn the property has been sold to a developer.

Decades earlier, headstrong Dale Butler’s driving passion is to bring home the prized filly her family lost to the Great Depression, but with World War II looming, she’s called upon in ways she never could have imagined. And while her world expands to include new friends and new love, tragedy strikes close to home one fateful night during the Battle of the Atlantic, changing her life forever.

As Nana Dale’s past comes to light in Allie’s search for answers, Dale’s courage and persistence may be just what Allie needs to carry on her grandmother’s legacy and keep her own dreams alive.

My Review: https://bestreads-kav.blogspot.com/2022/08/by-way-of-moonlight.html

When Stone Wings Fly by Karen Barnett (Kregel)

Uncovering a long-lost family story is the only way to bring her grandmother peace
Kieran Lucas’s grandmother is slipping into dementia, and, when her memory is gone, Kieran’s last tie to the family she barely knows will be lost forever. Worse, Granny Mac is being tormented by flashbacks of her mother’s death and the loss of their home.

In 1931, Rosie McCauley’s Smoky Mountains home is threatened by the Tennessee Great Smokies Park Commission as they create a new national park. But Rosie vows the only way they’ll get her land is if they haul her out in a pine box. When a compromise offers her and her disabled sister the opportunity to stay for her lifetime, it seems too good to be true.

Ornithologist Benton Fuller arrives to conduct a bird survey for the park and the two form a tenuous bond. But their friendship broadens a rift between her and the other mountain folk who are suspicious of any government connections. Then the discovery of an illegal still in the woods near her cabin leads to a violent clash between sides that could destroy them all.

Eighty-five years later, Kieran heads back to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park to find answers to her great-grandmother’s mysterious death and bring peace to Granny Mac before it’s too late. Park Historian Zach Jensen may be the key to locating both the answers and a precious family heirloom. But just as in the past, Kieran’s needs clash with government regulations. Will Zach block her from recovering what she needs and solving this family mystery?

My Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/4826547161

Where the Blue Sky Begins by Katie Powner (Bethany House)

Sometimes the hardest road of all is the road home.

When confident and handsome Eric Larson is sent to a rural Montana town to work in the local branch of his uncle’s financial company, he’s determined to exceed everyone’s expectations, earn a promotion, and be back in Seattle by the end of summer. Yet nothing could prepare him for the lessons this small town has in store.

At forty-six years old, eccentric and outspoken Eunice Parker has come to accept her terminal illness and has given herself one final task: seek forgiveness from everyone on her bucket list before her time runs out. But it will take more courage than she can muster on her own.

After an accident pushes Eric and Eunice together, the unlikely pair is forced to spend more time with each other than either would like, which challenges their deepest prejudices and beliefs. As summer draws to a close, neither Eric nor Eunice is where they thought they would be, but they both wrestle with the same important What matters most when the end is near?

YOUNG ADULT

Blood Secrets by Morgan L. Busse (Enclave Escape)

Skyworld, Book Two

Not everyone wants to see the world saved . . .

Time is running out. Cities are being engulfed in the Mist and humanity is on the brink of extinction. Theo believes he has found a way to stop mankind from Turning, but he doesn’t know how to alter Cass’s unique blood into a cure. Or if it can even be done.

Meanwhile, Cass struggles with the idea that she is possibly the savior of the world—a world she is not sure is worth saving.

From the Winchester manse to the steel city of Decadenn, there is something more chasing Cass than the House of Lords or the masked man who can walk in the Mist. Soon she must decide if she will use her blood to save mankind or let those who only care about themselves perish.

This Dreamer by Sara Patterson (Independent)

Watchers, Guardians, Strength Wielders, Water Movers, and, of course, THE DREAMER

Evie grows restless observing mortals from the safety of her desk in the Control Room. When a friend offers to smuggle her by portal into the human world, she jumps at the opportunity. Secretly, though, she also hopes to observe Adan, the human Dreamer. Only a glimpse, she promises herself.

But trouble awaits after her captivating adventure and delayed return. Not only did she take an unsanctioned trip to the ground, but the boy, the Dreamer, is missing. Worse still, her director believes she is to blame. 

Evidence soon places Adan in another sector, where Gifted humans are forbidden. 

Donning a human body and wielding a golden blade, Evie’s orders are to travel to this uncharted territory, find Adan, and take care of the problem.

As she attempts to keep the human emotions at bay, she discovers this intriguing boy was smuggled here for a reason, and perhaps the culprit—the Deceiver—is a threat to them all.

The Whisperer’s Wish by Janilise Lloyd (Scrivenings Press)

For sixteen years, Laurelin Moore has been keeping a secret. She is a whisperer and she knows that to reveal her gift now is a dangerous risk. Past whisperers have been exploited for their power. But Ausland’s queen is dead and acknowledging her magic is her only chance at becoming a Rook in the Pentax—a competition that will decide the kingdom’s next ruler.

Laurelin isn’t in it for the crown, though. She’s after the wish that will be granted to the victor. A wish that would save her dying brother, Pippin. But there are dangerous undercurrents to the competition, and Laurelin finds herself at the center of it. She begins to search for answers and discovers a secret with the potential to shatter the entire kingdom.

Wishtress by Nadine Brandes (Thomas Nelson)

She didn’t ask to be the Wishtress.

Myrthe was born with the ability to turn her tears into wishes. But when a granted wish goes wrong, she is cursed: the next tear she sheds will kill her. She must travel to the Well to break the curse before it claims her life—and before the king’s militairen find her. To survive the journey, Myrthe must harden her heart to keep herself from crying even a single tear.

He can stop time with a snap of his fingers.

Bastiaan’s powerful—and rare—Talent came in handy when he kidnapped the old king. Now the new king has a job for him: find the Wishtress and deliver her to the schloss. But Bastiaan needs a wish of his own. He gains Myrthe’s trust by promising to take her to the Well, but once he gets what he needs, he’ll turn her in. As long as his growing feelings for the girl with a stone heart don’t compromise him.

Their quest can end only one way: with her death.

Everyone seems to need a wish—the king, Myrthe’s cousin, the boy she thinks she loves. And they’re ready to bully, beg, and betray her for it. No one knows that to grant even one wish, Myrthe would pay with her life. And if she tells them about the curse . . . they’ll just kill her anyway.

The Wonderland Trials by Sara Ella (Enclave)

Solve the clues. Face your fears. Survive the Trials.

All Alice Liddell wants is to escape her Normal life in Oxford and find the parents who abandoned her ten years ago. But she gets more than she bargained for when her older sister Charlotte is arrested for having the infamous Wonder Gene—the key to unlocking the curious Wonderland Reality.

Soon, Alice receives a rather cryptic invitation to play for Team Heart in this year’s annual—and often deadly—Wonderland Trials. Now she has less than twenty-four hours to find her way into Wonderland where nothing is impossible . . . or what it seems.

The stakes are raised when she discovers players go missing during the Trials each year. Will she and her team solve the clues and find the missing players? Or will betrayal and distrust win, leaving Alice alone in a world of her own? Follow the White Rabbit into this topsy-turvy fantasy where players become prey, a sip of the wrong tea might as well be poison, and a queen’s ways do not always lead one where they ought to go.

50 thoughts on “Christy Awards Finalists 2023 – General Fiction + Young Adult”

  1. I’m a fan of dual timeline fiction so I would love to win By Way of the Moonlight by Elizabeth Musser. I’ve read good things about it and I especially enjoyed your review. Thanks for sharing!
    Connie
    cps1950ATgmailDOTcom

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I would love When Stone Wings Fly by Karen Barnett, I have read the other two in this category. They were excellent! paulamarys49ATgmailDOTcom Thanks for the chance.

    Sent from my iPad

    >

    Liked by 1 person

  3. When Stone Wings Fly by Karen Barnett sounds great! I have read a couple of her western national park books, but this is a different slant on a park story. I had ancestors who lived in the same general region back in the early-mid 1800’s (about 40 miles from the later park entrance) and have visited as part of a “genealogy and sight-seeing” trip. Would be a beautiful setting. Thanks!

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Kav, I’ve already two of the three general fiction titles so I’ll go with When Stone Wings Fly by Karen Barnett. It has been on my want-to-read list too so thanks for the chance to win it! 🙂 Let me also highly recommend Katie Powner’s Where the Blue Sky Begins. I absolutely loved that book. So good!!

    ckbarker at gmail dot com

    Liked by 1 person

  5. I’d love to read When Stone Wings Fly, loved your review!

    I picked up a copy of By Way of the Moonlight but haven’t read it yet.

    Thanks, Sandyavery at comcast dot net

    Liked by 1 person

  6. When Stone Wings Fly for me! I love Karen Barnett & it’s been a while since I’ve read her books. Plus, this one has been on my want-to-read pile probably since it came out 🙂

    teamob4 (at) gmail (dot) com

    Liked by 1 person

  7. How cool to be torn between two different dual timeline stories! In the end, I think I would love the opportunity to read “By Way of the Moonlight” by Elizabeth Musser if I were fortunate enough to be selected.

    Thank you so much for the chance to win a copy!
    2clowns at arkansas dot net

    Liked by 1 person

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