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Indelible: A Novel
Unavailable
Indelible: A Novel
Unavailable
Indelible: A Novel
Audiobook10 hours

Indelible: A Novel

Written by Kristen Heitzmann

Narrated by Kirsten Potter

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

In a clash of light and darkness, can courage prevail?

Rescuing a toddler from the jaws of a mountain lion, Trevor MacDaniel, a high-country outfitter, sets in motion events he can't foresee. His act of bravery entwines his life with gifted sculptor Natalie Reeve-and attracts a grim admirer.

Trevor's need to guard and protect is born of tragedy, prompting his decision to become a search and rescue volunteer. Natalie's gift of sculpting comes from an unusual disability that seeks release through her creative hands. In each other they see strength and courage as they face an incomprehensible foe.

When a troubled soul views Trevor as archangel and adversary, Redford's peaceful mountain community is threatened. Together with Police Chief Jonah Westfall, Trevor presses his limits to combat the menace who targets the most helpless and innocent.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 3, 2011
ISBN9780307932754
Unavailable
Indelible: A Novel

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Reviews for Indelible

Rating: 4.0694477777777776 out of 5 stars
4/5

36 ratings7 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    "INDELIBLE" BY KRISTEN HEITZMANNDaring rescues, mysterious happenings, and a potential for romance. Kristen Heitzmann's novel is a prize.Trevor McDaniel soon finds himself in a fight to save the innocent and helpless of the Westfall community from a disturbed and damaged soul.A great read! One you won't want to miss!-Kitty Bullard / Great Minds Think Aloud Book Club
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Though the book started out with a "drop you into the action" scene, it didn't grab me right away and pull me in. It took me a while to start caring about the characters and what happened to them.WARNING: POSSIBLE SPOILERS--read at your own discretion.I liked that we had flawed characters--some with flaws we and others could see and some with flaws that are more internal. It was also nice to see the characters confront some of their flaws and fears.I do wonder if the author intended that all "artistic" characters had some disability? Natalie has an eidetic memory and she's used sculpting as a way to cope with her problem of faces getting stuck in her memory. Fleur is blind but paints. And Natalie seems to lose her sculpting ability once she loses the eidetic memory feature.I liked that the town seems to look out for Fleur and adapt to her--saying hello to her as they approach or she approaches, for example. I like Piper and Fleur as roommates and I like that Piper is able to see below the idiosyncrasies of Miles and Natalie to what lies beneath.Though it is never directly stated that any of the characters are Christian, Natalie and Aaron both seem to be--or at least believe in the power of prayer. Trevor tells Aaron that he's undecided, yet Aaron seems to have no problem with Trevor hanging with Natalie despite that difference. (To be fair to Aaron, he's dealing with a very ill wife and rehabbing from a leg injury himself as well as trying to be a father to his now one-armed son. We do see Trevor starting to change but in my mind, it's too soon to know if that change will "stick". I like Whit's and Sara's loyalty to Trevor. It bothers me that Sara still seems hung up on Trevor even though she's married to Whit and the mother of his child. Even Whit seems to feel Sara is with him because Trevor came as a package deal. We don't see enough to know whether Sara reacts this way to all his dates or if it's just because his relationship with Natalie seems different. (It seems prior to Natalie, Trevor pretty much stuck to surface dating--people he wasn't really interested in being with long-term.) I hope that her behavior was out of concern for Trevor--both that he not hurt Natalie and that he not be hurt by a relationship--rather than out of jealousy or out of fear that if Trevor had a steady relationship, she would not be important to him anymore. Though I don't like that the little boy lost his arm, I like that he adapts quickly, taking it in stride and not seeing it as a handicap. He wants to climb walls, run, etc. just like all other little boys.I guessed that the quotes in the intervening pages between chapters were from "Paradise Lost" even before that was revealed. I didn't quite understand the motivation of that character though. I guess he wanted to pass what he felt was his mission on to someone he felt would continue it in a better way than he could. But it was a bit disturbing.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    "INDELIBLE" BY KRISTEN HEITZMANNDaring rescues, mysterious happenings, and a potential for romance. Kristen Heitzmann's novel is a prize.Trevor McDaniel soon finds himself in a fight to save the innocent and helpless of the Westfall community from a disturbed and damaged soul.A great read! One you won't want to miss!-Kitty Bullard / Great Minds Think Aloud Book Club
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Thought I read them out of order, the Redford books were my first attempt to climb back into the satisfying story haze "The Edge of Recall" created for me. Even if I loved "Indelible" a little less than "The Edge of Recall," this is still going to be the book that won me over as a fan. Ms. Heitzmann's romantic suspense novels just rock.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Natalie Reeve and Trevor MacDaniel meet after Trevor rescues Natalies three year old nephew from the jaws of a mountain lion, literally. Natalie is a sculptor with an eidetic memory, meaning the ability to recall images, sounds, events or objects with clarity and extraordinary detail. In Natalies case, she recalls every face to the point of not being able to see anything else. When this happens to her she needs to sculpt right away. Trevor and his business partner Whit are rescue volunteers. Trevor has some deep dark secret and this secret is the reason he has decided to become a rescuer. Natalie finds herself becoming deeply attracted to him but is afraid to become involved. Trevor feels the need to protect Natalie especially with the fact that there is someone stalking Trevor. Both Natalie and Trevor have their own demons to deal with. Natalie for the accident to her nephew of which she feels guilty for and Trevor for a tragedy that happened in his past that he feels guilty for. Can these two troubled souls find the love and forgiveness they both crave and can they find that with each other? You will have to read the book to find out. I enjoyed this novel and found it sufficiently creepy at times but overall I liked it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Indelible by Kristen HeitzmannTHE SUMMARY:Broken dreams don’t keep former gold medal skier and Search and Rescue volunteer Trevor MacDaniel from taking life head on, but personal loss has driven home how fragile and fleeting life and innocence are. He will risk his life for someone in need, as Natalie Reeve learns when her nephew is snatched from a trail by a mountain lion.An eidetic savant, Natalie processes emotional images that lodge in her mind by sculpting the faces in clay. She displays her nature statues at her gallery, but hides the faces that are part of her gift, part of her disability. Seeing beneath the surface, she processes the micro expressions and reveals, in clay, the person she sees with God’s eyes.When Trevor and Natalie finally meet, strange things begin to happen. Mysterious pictures, missing children, and a stalker keep their budding relationship in chaos.THE REVIEW:The internal struggles of each character in this novel drew me in so deep, I could not stop reading until I had finished the book. Even now, after reading to the very end, I crave more. More understanding of each character, more of what the future may hold for each of them, more of Kristen Heitzmann’s novels. This is the first of her books that I have read, and I am an instant fan. I MUST read more! Indelible is wrought with suspense, danger, intrigue, and an ending that is almost impossible to predict. Relationships born of tragedy, held together by love and trust, depth of emotion, and unfulfilled longings are just the tip of what makes this book worth reading. I highly recommend Indelible by Kristen Heitzmann as a wonderful addition to any reader’s bookshelf. Indelible is a novel that can be read alone, but makes the reader crave more. Heitzman’s novel, Indivisible precedes this novel, Indelible. I loved Indelible, and plan to read Indivisible as well.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Trevor MacDaniel’s first-hand knowledge of tragedy prompts his decision to become a search and rescue volunteer. He never realized that this choice would cause him to become the object of a strange obsession by a troubled soul. Someone who seems to see Trevor as both an angel and an enemy. When Trevor rescues a toddler from a mountain lion, he meets Natalie Reeve, a prodigy with eidetic memory and her own personal demons.I have read a few Kristen Heitzmann books before this one and loved them. This one was no different. The story immediately drew me in and kept my attention. There were times when I wanted to reach into the pages and wring Trevor’s neck or smack another character for something or other. Kristen really has this way of making you fall in love with some of them and then you just want to scream or cry or whatever. The dynamics are amazing! If you are a fan of any of her other books then you I recommend this one as well.