Reviews for Through each tomorrow [electronic resource].

Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.
Two friends bound by a time-crossing secret struggle under the weight of duty and expectation. In 1563, Charles is a trusted adviser to the queen, but in 1883 his horse farm faces ruin. Andrew longs to pursue medicine but feels trapped by his family’s business and costly feuding. The pair strikes a bargain. Each will assume his alternate time line's identity to solve the other’s troubles. But deception collides with unexpected love in the time lines, where neither Charles nor Andrew planned to stay. Facing impossibly high stakes, they must choose whether to cling to control or trust God’s timing. In book six of Gabrielle Meyer’s award-winning Timeless series, the time-crossing family tree grows more intricate with fresh revelations, connections, and characters. Through Each Tomorrow is captivating and beautifully detailed, set amid the cutthroat intrigue of Queen Elizabeth’s court and ruthless rivalries of the Gilded Age. It features an aching narrative of sacrifice and surrender in which Meyer delicately balances the despair of persistent disappointment with the affirming message of God’s unwavering presence and purpose.
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Meyer (For a Lifetime) romps through parallel timelines in the irresistible latest in her Timeless series. Charles spends half his days as a farmer in 1883 Virginia and the other half as an earl and adviser to Queen Elizabeth in 1563 Britain. At age 25 he’ll have to permanently choose a timeline and needs to iron out his problems in each life first. He starts by commissioning fellow time traveler Andrew, a medical student in the 19th century, to treat the ill Queen Elizabeth. It seems like a fail-safe plan until Charles’s stepsister Cecily points out all three could be accused of sabotage if the court learns Charles hired a fake physician. Meanwhile, in the 19th century, Charles agrees to show up in his earl persona at Andrew’s family’s vacation home, in an effort to boost Andrew’s mother’s social standing. As it becomes increasingly difficult to carry out their duties without being found out (or irrevocably changing history), Cecily, Charles, and Andrew must put their trust in God to lead them to the right path, wherever—and whenever—it leads. Meyer uses questions of time and fate to develop her characters’ identities and moral crises, and vividly reanimates bygone eras with rich historical detail. Readers will be hooked. (Nov.)