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Review of To Love a Falcon by Nancy C. Williams

Katya Morozov is an airplane mechanic in post-WWII Russia. Her fiancé, Mikhail, is

long-overdue to return from his naval assignment. They, along with Katya’s father, Ivan, are

members of the Narrow Path, an underground group of Christians who provide safe passage for

fellow believers fleeing Communist religious persecution.

Suddenly, Katya is transferred to a secret air base in remote Siberia. She is befriended

there by a couple of fellow mechanics, but there are many dangers. Are the test pilots, with all

their swagger and bravado, friends or foes? What about the beautiful and severe female director

of the project and her slimy henchman?

Can Katya both resist temptation and learn to forgive her enemies? What will it take for

her to be delivered from the icy dangers of this desolate land?

Nancy C. Williams’s first novel kept me on the edge of my seat the entire time. Don’t

miss your opportunity to soar with ‘To Love A Falcon’.

 
 
 

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