Reviews

A Champion's Heart: Born to Win Men, by Piper Huguley

cakt1991's review

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emotional slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

I’ve hoped to read A Champion’s Heart for a while, since I first read the linked book A Virtuous Ruby, and am glad to finally be able to. Piper Huguley writes such richly detailed and researched Black American historical romance, with this one being no exception. 
Secret baby is a trope I don’t love, but the way Huguley writes it as a facet of Champ and Delie’s relationship, is well done. I loved seeing Delie thriving, receiving higher education and taking in orphaned children with her sisters. And Champ is a great hero, and I loved that he had dreams of making it as a boxer, but also wanted to make things right with Delie too. Their relationship is a beautiful one, and I rooted for them to work through the challenges they faced to find happiness together. 
This is an inspirational romance, and whether you enjoy it will be dependent on your feelings on the genre. I personally liked that it felt believable for the characters, and given the general whiteness in the more mainstream areas of the genre, I appreciate titles like this that have an intersection of faith with the experiences of racism (or other marginalizations). 
This is a delightful gem of a book, and one I’d absolutely love to see get more attention. If you’re looking for more American-set historical romance, especially with Black leads, I recommend picking this one up. 




kjcharles's review

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I wish someone wrote English histrom like Piper Huguley writes American histrom.

I've been following the adventures of the Bledsoe girls since the first, A Virtuous Ruby, and I am in awe of the way this author handles the setting, the characterisation, the appalling cruelty of American institutional racism and the way it affected people, black and white. Some of the detail in here is jaw dropping--the "breeding" of boxers, God help us; what it was like for black people to travel in the Depression era South with the risks inherent in stopping for petrol--it is just extraordinary to read. Really incredibly powerful and vivid.

I loved Champ, the boxer hero, and Delie, the wilful girl he left behind. The basis of the conflict, Champ's uncertainty about the parenthood of Delie's child, could have been more strongly developed, and didn't quite carry the weight it had to bear as the source of their conflict. But the romance was intense, and I teared up at the end. Secondary characters terrific as always and lovely to see the Bledsoe girls again (and Jay, always my favourite hero).

This is very much an inspirational, with a lot of focus on faith, which isn't to all reader taste, but hey, I'm a humanist and I loved the book. I strongly appreciated the different perspectives on that, including the characters for whom genuine faith doesn't necessarily translate to love or charity.

An author going from strength to strength.
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