A review by chautona
Dare to Dream Again by Alana Terry

4.0

Why You Need to Dare to Dream Again
I’ve been telling people all year that Alana Terry writes a really interesting book. She takes things we’re not used to reading and makes them happen. Her Out of North Korea made my top 10 for the year so far because she not only told a compelling story, she did it in first-person, present-tense without me even noticing for the first three-quarters of the book.

Dare to Dream Again does something similar… and opposite. This time, Alana Terry takes familiar things that usually annoy readers and makes them work. We have instant attraction working out in a reasonable, rational way for that character. We have an abusive father…and a little pipsqueak of a kid who isn’t the horrible nightmare you’d expect–even while he is.

Every time something happened that would have annoyed me in any other book, I had to admit that it worked. Not only that, but I liked how it worked. The main character, Gloria, had a personality and a history to make every decision that would have been rather overly-convenient in any other book fit perfectly in this one. She’s even annoying at first!

And Derek? The guy would have moved way too fast and been much too invested far too soon—except his history set him up to be exactly where he was and act precisely the way he did.

A subtle lesson flows through the book, too.

When we’ve had our dreams fulfilled in beautiful ways, we often feel like we don’t have the right to keep dreaming, but the Lord loves to give “good gifts” to His children just like any father. Gloria learned that in the book… and I got a nice reminder of it.

Look, I keep wanting to complain about things in Dare to Dream Again.

In any other book, I’d be telling you how implausible this or that is and how it just didn’t work for me. But the characters are realistic. They behave in realistic ways. None of them are obnoxiously perfect. And all of them have something to teach us without being preachy. I'm really glad that I requested a review copy.

And the next book? What Dreams May Come? Yeah. Already shelved that sucker in my Kindle Unlimited. I fell in love with Susannah (Gloria’s oldest daughter) in this book. I want to see where she goes in life.

My only quibble is that it’s a novella, and like many novellas, it ends much too soon for my taste. Part of that is my personal objection to the shortness of novellas. Most of it is just that I wanted more of Derek and Gloria.