
About the Book

Book: A Courageous Betrothal
Author: Denise Weimer
Genre: Christian Historical Romance
Release Date: November 7, 2023
A wounded lieutenant, a woman fierce enough to protect her family, and an American Revolution with everything at stake.
Red-haired, freckle-faced and almost six feet tall, Jenny White has resigned herself to fame over love. Possessing the courage and wits to guard her younger siblings against nature, natives, and loyalists in Georgia’s “Hornet’s Nest” gives life meaning until she meets scout, Caylan McIntosh.
From the time Jenny nurses the young lieutenant back to health after the Battle of Kettle Creek, she can’t deny her attraction to the vexing Highlander, who seems determined to dismantle her emotional armor. But when Georgia falls to the British and Caylan returns to guide Jenny’s family on a harrowing exodus into the North Carolina mountains, will his secrets prove stronger than his devotion? Or will their love be courageous enough to carry them through the battles ahead.Click here to get your copy!
About the Author

North Georgia native Denise Weimer has authored over a dozen traditionally published novels and a number of novellas—historical and contemporary romance, romantic suspense, and time slip. As a freelance editor and Acquisitions & Editorial Liaison for Wild Heart Books, she’s helped other authors reach their publishing dreams. A wife and mother of two daughters, Denise always pauses for coffee, chocolate, and old houses.
More from Denise
Welcome to the Hornet’s Nest…the setting for A Courageous Betrothal. In my Scouts of the Georgia Frontier Series, we started with my September release, A Counterfeit Betrothal, in 1813. We’ve moved backward in time to middle Georgia, where the conflict between Patriots, Loyalists, and Native Americans became so intense during the American Revolution the area was dubbed “the Hornet’s Nest.” Little is known about this portion of the war, but it’s not just the setting that makes A Courageous Betrothal unique.
If the story sounds faintly familiar, that’s because it was originally Across Three Autumns of Barbour’s Backcountry Brides (2018). That’s why it’s a short novella instead of a full-length novel. The story became a free agent just in time to join my Scouts of the Georgia Frontier. It was a perfect fit not only because of the subject matter but also because some of the real people and places show up in this story as well as the novels of the series.
Another thing that sets A Courageous Betrothal apart is its heroine. As authors, we occasionally create characters who take on life and burst off the page. That’s Jenny White. Maybe because she was based on a real person, Nancy Hart. Six feet tall, red-haired, pock-marked, and a crack shot, Nancy was called “Wahatche” or “War Woman” by local Indians. She spied for Colonel Elijah Clark and captured Loyalists and British soldiers on more than one occasion. Her exploits are echoed in Jenny’s.
So are her insecurities, which make her relatable. Jenny’s given up on the notion of finding love. Men always prefer women like her dainty younger sister. And then she meets Caylan McIntosh, a scout for Colonel Clark whose Highland heritage makes him an ardent admirer of Jenny’s strength. Her doubts—along with the shorter word count and the time needed for love to grow between wartime encounters—are a reason I chose to write the novella solely from Jenny’s POV.
By no means does Jenny outshine Caylan. He’s still probably the most swoon-worthy hero I’ve written. Here’s a little snippet of him persuading Jenny to dance.
The unseen fiddler took his cue. The notes anchored themselves inside Jenny’s chest, with invisible strings tugging her toward the sound. Caylan and presumably several other Scots started a jig. From his fancy footwork and agile leaps, the lieutenant appeared dead sober. She found herself propping the pitchfork against a wall and drifting closer in the shadows, her mother’s previous warning drowned out in the waterfall of lilting notes.
When the musician warbled into “Soldier’s Joy,” a woman faced off with her husband. As they greeted and turned, two frontiersmen leapt up to join them. Caylan looked around as though searching for a partner and noticed Jenny standing just outside the circle of light. He came toward her, hand outstretched.
“Come, lass, will ye dance with me? Ye know this one.”
Indeed, she did. She had seen settlers perform the steps on the Yadkin River. Before Jenny had time to think, Caylan whirled her into the circle, and a man dancing a female part grabbed her for a ladies’ chain. She caught a brief glimpse of Gabriel’s alarmed face as she whizzed past.
Delighted with the actual women who joined them, the men paid courtly attention that caused Jenny’s face to flame. But none more than the sensation of Caylan’s eyes, warm amber in the firelight, fixed on her every time they met. The roughened strength of his large hand made hers feel small.
When the song changed, Jenny gave an awkward curtsy and tried to back away, but her partner caught her arm. “’Tis just a Cumberland Reel.”
“I know no Cumberland Reel. Remember, we do not dance.”
“Oh. I did forget that.” But Caylan’s smirk hinted otherwise. “Seems to me Wahatchee would not grow lily-livered at a wee promenade. See, ’tis only a skip step, toe to heel?”
Jenny turned her lips down. “Wahatchee has a mother.”
Caylan threw his head back and laughed. “What? That slip of a woman has a Highland princess like you all a’cower?”
“I am English, sir.” She clasped her hands behind her petticoats.
“Well, pardon me, my lady,” he retorted with mock offense, “but yer regal bearing and coloring beg otherwise. I wager some hint of Celtic besmears the White family past…far back in the recesses of time, no doubt.”
The “regal coloring” went up in flames. Jenny repeated what she’d heard her mother proudly state many times. “We come from pure English stock.”
“Well, then, I dare ye to prove a proper English lady has no fear of a Cumberland Reel.”
“Those are break teeth words, McIntosh. If I chose, I could dance until daybreak, and still be dancing long after you collapse.” So saying, Jenny stalked to the tail of the reel and waited for the laughing Scotsman to follow her.
Just like firing a gun, riding a horse, clearing brush, and swimming, dancing provided no challenge. Jenny did all physical things well and with endurance. What she had not expected, however, was the way Caylan’s obvious approval made her feel. It answered a craving deep inside that she had attempted to discredit for years. Not to mention the brush of his fingertips, the pressure of his hand on her waist, spread the bonfire to her bones.
From that moment to Jenny nursing Caylan back to health after the Battle of Kettle Creek, through the climactic, real-life exodus of civilians from Georgia to the mountains of North Carolina, Caylan fights for Jenny’s trust with as much determination as he fights the British. I hope you’ll be swept away by their romance amid the dangers of the Hornet’s Nest. And if you like Scottish characters, stay tuned for book three of the Scouts Series, coming in January and set in 1775 on the border of Georgia and South Carolina.
Interview with Denise
Share something your readers wouldn’t know about you.
Some readers will know this, but living history greatly influences my writing. I often dress in period clothing to take my books to historical sites and festivals. I’ve also worked with historical museums and organizations as an interpreter. And I’ve led a vintage dance group. The research I’ve done for those programs and the research I’ve done for my books overlaps. I also find it extremely helpful while editing historical romances for other authors! There’s nothing like bringing history to life, whether it’s in period costume or on the page.

What were the highlight or key challenges you faced when writing this book?
This novella was originally part of Barbour’s Backcountry Brides Collection, back when they featured eight stories. So it couldn’t be more than 20,000 words. I knew I wanted to capture the intensity of the conflict among the Patriots, Loyalists, and Indians in Georgia’s Revolutionary War backcountry, dubbed “the Hornet’s Nest.” That included the Battle of Kettle Creek and the exodus of all the Patriot civilians from Georgia to Watauga, North Carolina, but those were several years apart. You can imagine trying to fit all that into such a short novella!
That’s part of the reason I chose to write the story from the heroine’s point of view only. That and I wanted the reader to remain in the same suspense as Jenny as to how Caylan felt about her. Jenny is based on Georgia’s real-life Rev War heroine, Nancy Hart. Tall, red-haired, and a crack shot, Nancy spied on and captured the British and was called “War Woman” by the Creek Indians. But her bravery and skill on the frontier don’t offset Jenny’s fears that a man will never find her attractive, especially when she’s set beside her pretty little sister, Hester.
Her struggle can be summed up in this passage:
Jenny gritted her teeth at the way Caylan’s eyes followed Hester’s softly rounded girlish form, laced into her best winter petticoat and stays, her golden curls trailing from beneath her cap.
She was used to it. She was. The frontier had just made her forget a little. The frontier flipped things backward, making a strong, tough girl desirable and a weak, delicate one a liability. But the presence of men always managed to put things back in their natural order.
What is the key theme and/or message in the book?
As the militia takes her father and then her younger brother away and her mother sickens, more and more responsibility comes to rest on Jenny’s shoulders, producing the assumption that she can only rely on herself. That combined with her insecurities where romance is concerned makes her spurn Caylan’s help. She has to learn she can trust him…and trust that God made her exactly the way she should be. Beautiful and smart and strong.
Where can readers find out more about you and your books?
Connect with Denise here:
Any current or upcoming projects you’d like to tell us about?
Book Three of The Scouts of the Georgia Frontier, A Cherished Betrothal, is coming in January!
A Cherished Betrothal – Book Three
1775
Alexander Morris bears the childhood scars of the Long Canes massacre that killed his brother and father. His dark past forces him into the lonely life of Georgia Ranger, and eventually, to join the bordering South Carolina Rangers that revolt against the Crown. When he’s posted to the fort erected to defend the community once decimated by the massacre, duty demands he court the loyalty of his sworn enemies, the fierce Cherokee warriors.
Elspeth Lawrence never forgot the boy who sacrificed himself for her at Long Canes—any more than she forgot the younger sister taken captive. She’s learned to not only forgive but help minister to the Cherokees at her father’s mission. Alex Morris’s arrival at nearby Fort Charlotte stirs Elsie’s memories and her emotions. He doesn’t even remember her…or the long-ago attack. But the bitterness that simmers just beneath his stoic exterior—as well as her courtship by a local landowner—challenge their undeniable bond.
When Alex uncovers a long-held secret and a plot to sabotage patriot talks with the Cherokees, he must choose between his desire for revenge and his love for the girl he saved long ago.
Blog Stops
Texas Book-aholic, November 8
Gina Holder, Author and Blogger, November 8
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, November 9
Happily Managing a Household of Boys, November 10
Blossoms and Blessings, November 11
Books You Can Feel Good About, November 11
Simple Harvest Reads, November 12 (Guest Review from Donna Cline)
Babbling Becky L’s Book Impressions, November 13
Lighthouse Academy Blog, November 13 (Guest Review from Marilyn Ridgway)
lakesidelivingsite, November 14
Locks, Hooks and Books, November 15
Pause for Tales, November 16
Life on Chickadee Lane, November 16
For Him and My Family, November 17
Cover Lover Book Review, November 18
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, November 19
To Everything There Is A Season, November 19
Holly’s Book Corner, November 20
Connie’s History Classroom, November 21
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Denise is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Amazon gift card!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/28d33/a-courageous-betrothal-celebration-tour-giveaway



Thank you for sharing. Blessings
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As a woman who qualifies for DAR, I love all books about the revolution.
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That’s amazing to have your history documented back to Colonial times.
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That is wonderful to have your family history documented back to colonial times.
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Beautiful cover.
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Congrats on the book. Very pretty cover. Love the green.
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I love the except. Denise Weimer is a fantastic author of historical fiction.
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Aw, thank you!! And thank you all for the positive feedback on the cover. Our designer at Wild Heart Books is very talented.
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Thank you so much for sharing. God bless you.
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Great interview. This looks like an interesting novel. Thanks for hosting this giveaway
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Thank you all for stopping by! I hope we can connect on social media. ☺️
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Thank you for sharing your interview, bio and the book details, I have enjoyed reading about you and your work and I am looking forward to reading A Courageous Betrothal
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I love the cover, esp bcz she’s a redhead.
Cindi Knowles
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