Sunday, June 2, 2019

The Number of Love by Roseanna M. White

book cover
The Number of Love
by Roseanna M. White


ISBN-13: 9780764231810
Paperback: 400 pages
Publisher: Bethany House
Released: June 4, 2019

Source: ebook review copy from the publisher through NetGally.

Book Description, Modified from Goodreads:
Three years into the Great War, England’s greatest asset is their intelligence network—field agents risking their lives to gather information, and codebreakers able to crack every German telegram. Margot De Wilde thrives in the environment of the secretive Room 40, where she spends her days deciphering intercepted messages. But when her world is turned upside down by an unexpected loss, for the first time in her life numbers aren’t enough.

Drake Elton returns wounded from the field, followed by an enemy that just won’t give up. He’s smitten quickly by the too-intelligent Margot, but how to convince a girl who lives entirely in her mind that sometimes life’s answers lie in the heart?

Amidst biological warfare, encrypted letters, and a German spy who wants to destroy not just them, but others they love, Margot and Drake will have to work together to save them all from the very secrets that brought them together.


My Review:
The Number of Love is a suspenseful Christian romance set in the Fall of 1917 in England and Spain. The hero was an undercover spy in Spain who was trying to stop the things that German spies were doing there. So there were some spy versus spy suspense scenes. His sister worked as a secretary at the naval building where intercepted German coded messages were decoded. She's friends with the heroine, a super smart mathematician and code-breaker who prized logic while denying emotions. The hero was wounded and returned to London to heal, and so he got to know the heroine through his sister. They worked well together when they realized that a German spy was attempting to steal a British codebook.

The main characters acted realistically, were engaging, and I cared about what happened to them. The hero and heroine were a good match who respected and supported each other. The heroine was afraid that marrying someone would mean giving up using her gift for mathematics as she'd dreamed. She was also mad at God for once asking her to pray for an unknown person instead of someone that she cared about who needed help. She came to recognize that she was asking the wrong questions of God. There was no sex or bad language. Overall, I'd recommend this enjoyable spy and code-breaking novel.


If you've read this book, what do you think about it? I'd be honored if you wrote your own opinion of the book in the comments.


1 comment:

Carole said...

Interesting era Cheers