Pacific Northwest
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Choosing the Right Danger + Romance Book
Readers sometimes ask how to tell what kind of danger + romance story they’re picking up. Book categories help, but they’re not always consistent. The good news is you can usually tell what level of angst you’re signing up for before you get very far.
Think of it as choosing your preferred balance of angst. Do you want a heartfelt romance with a side of adrenaline, or an adrenaline rush with a side of romance? The stories I write are built around the growing relationship between the main characters. The danger is real, sometimes very real, but its main job is to push the hero and heroine together and test their trust.
You’ll often see clues right away:
- The story opens with a personal problem or threat aimed at one of the characters
- The hero and heroine quickly find themselves working together
- A lot of page time is spent on trust, secrets, emotional wounds, and growing connection
- The danger feels personal and close to home
In these stories, the emotional journey sits at the center. The mystery or threat matters, but the real question readers are waiting to see answered is whether the two characters will learn to trust each other and build something lasting. If you enjoy a story where love grows under pressure, this is probably your comfort zone.
When the danger drives the story, the narrative focuses primarily on the action side of the equation.These stories often start with a major crisis already in motion—a murder, a conspiracy, a missing person, or some larger plot that needs to be stopped. The characters may meet because of the crisis, and their relationship may grow during the story, but the unfolding danger is what keeps the pages turning.
You’ll often notice things like:
- The opening chapters jump straight into a major event or investigation
- The plot involves wider stakes—organized crime, government secrets, large-scale threats
- The pacing is faster and the focus stays on solving the problem
- The relationship develops along the way rather than driving the story
These are great choices for readers who enjoy higher adrenaline and bigger stakes, with romance woven into the middle of the action.
Both genres combine danger and romance, which is why readers often enjoy both. The difference really comes down to what carries the story forward.
A quick way to think about it is this:
- If you want a story where the relationship is the emotional center and the danger intensifies it, look for books that focus heavily on the characters working together and learning to trust each other.
- If you want a story with bigger action and higher stakes, where the relationship grows in the middle of a larger crisis, choose books that lean more heavily into the investigation or conflict.
Neither approach is better than the other. They simply offer different flavors of tension. And sometimes the most fun part of browsing a new book is deciding just how much angst you’re in the mood for that day.
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Welcome to Cedar Haven

A Reader’s Starter Guide to the True North Brotherhood
If you enjoy romantic suspense set in small towns where everyone knows your name—and not all of them can be trusted—you might feel right at home in Cedar Haven.
Tucked into the Pacific Northwest, Cedar Haven is the kind of place that looks peaceful on the surface. Fog rolls in off the water. Forest trails wind through towering evergreens. The kind of town where people wave when they pass you on the road.
But like many small towns, Cedar Haven has its secrets. And when trouble comes, it doesn’t stay small for long.
The True North Brotherhood series blends:
- romantic suspense
- faith-driven redemption arcs
- protective heroes
- strong, thoughtful heroines
These are stories where danger is real—but so are courage, loyalty, and the quiet strength that comes from faith.
If you like books where the romantic relationship grows under pressure, the characters wrestle with real choices, and the ending leaves you with hope, you’re in the right place.
At the heart of Cedar Haven is a group of men who have one thing in common: they’ve all been given a second chance. The True North Brotherhood is made up of men with complicated pasts. They have made mistakes, paid for them, and chosen to live differently.
Now, they stand in the gap for others. They protect the vulnerable. They step into danger when it would be easier to walk away. And they hold each other accountable to God’s Word.
They are not perfect men. But they are determined to be better ones.
The women in Cedar Haven are capable, thoughtful, willing to stand for what’s right, and to stand up for themselves. They aren’t looking for men to hide behind, they want men worth standing beside.
They challenge. They ask hard questions. And they bring their own strength into the story. These relationships aren’t built on control or convenience.
They’re built on trust, respect, and the willingness to stand side by side when things get difficult.
Cedar Haven stories lean toward the relationship-driven side of romantic suspense. That means the danger matters but the people matter more.
You’ll find tension without graphic violence, faith that shows up in real decisions, and redemption that’s lived out, not just spoken.
These are stories about what happens when people choose courage… again and again.
Cedar Haven is shaped by its surroundings: fog that rolls in without warning, forests that can hide more than wildlife, and coastlines where beauty and danger meet. The setting isn’t just background—it becomes part of the story because in the Pacific Northwest, isolation is never far away… even when you’re not alone.
If you’re new to Cedar Haven, the best place to begin is at the beginning of the series, where you’ll meet the Brotherhood and see how their stories first intertwine. Download your free copy of, Where Men Stand and discover how the Brotherhood came to be. From there, each book builds on the last, expanding both the relationships and the world. You can read each novel as a stand-alone story but the real secrets of cedar Haven will remain hidden unless you read them all.
Cedar Haven isn’t a perfect place, but it is a place where broken things can be restored, courage still matters, and no one has to stand alone. If that sounds like the kind of story you’re looking for then start reding with a free copy of Where Men Stand, and …
Welcome to Cedar Haven.
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An Introduction to Cedar Haven

Cedar Haven is a quiet town tucked along Washington State’s northern border—but beneath its peaceful surface, a smuggling ring is taking root.
The True North Brotherhood—men once broken, now redeemed by the blood of Jesus—are determined to walk a new path. As they fight to rebuild their lives, they find themselves drawn into a battle to protect the very town that would rather see them gone.
With a suspicious police force watching their every move and danger closing in, these men must stand in the gap for Cedar Haven’s citizens. And along the way, each will discover the woman God has chosen to stand beside him.
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Why the Pacific Northwest Is Perfect for Romantic Suspense
There’s something about the Pacific Northwest that feels like it was made for romantic suspense. The atmosphere, the isolation, the beauty mixed with danger—it creates the perfect backdrop for stories where love and risk walk hand in hand.
Here are ten reasons the PNW continues to capture readers’ imaginations.

1. Natural Built-In Suspense
Fog. Forests. Storms rolling in off the water.
The PNW doesn’t need help creating tension—it does it all on its own. Visibility drops, paths disappear, and danger can feel just one step away. Rocky shores, cold mist, hidden shoals, and complex currents naturally lend themselves to suspense.
2. Isolation Without Going to the “Middle of Nowhere”
You can have a modern town… and still be completely cut off. I live 4 miles from town but have no cellphone reception. We rely on our satellite dish, and when a storm takes the power out, all connectivity goes down with it.
In both real life and fiction, islands, mountain roads, and dense forests allow people to connect with one another, but not always easily so. A mudslide or a washed out bridge can isolate a home, or even an entire community, for days.
Those kind of factors are a suspense level unto themselves. All an author needs to do is toss in a stalker and bam, instant page turner.
3. Small Towns with Big Secrets
Quiet coastal towns and tucked-away communities create the perfect setting for hidden pasts, long memories, generational grudges, and secrets that never quite stay secret. The suspense builds because everyone knows everyone…or thinks they do.
4. Rugged Landscapes Raise the Stakes
From rocky shorelines to deep forests and mountain terrain, the environment itself can become a threat. Characters don’t just face people—they face mountains, gorges, weather, and distance. Surviving the setting can be a major part of the story.
5. Water Everywhere
Puget Sound, the Pacific Ocean, rivers, inlets, coves, even false bays. Water adds beauty, movement, and danger. It creates natural barriers that hem heroes in—and provide convenient escape routes for the bad guys.
6. A Moody, Atmospheric Tone
The PNW has a distinct emotional feel: overcast skies, filtered light through trees, and quiet, reflective settings. It naturally supports stories that are introspective, emotional, and layered with tension.
7. Wildlife and the Unexpected
This is a place where nature is still very present. Whether it’s as mundane as a barking dog sensing danger, something unknown moving in the trees, or wildlife complicating a scene…it can add unpredictability without forcing it.
8. Close-Knit Communities
In smaller PNW settings, people rely on each other. That creates strong dynamics for found family, loyalty, and layered conflict when trust is broken, which naturally lend themselves to romantic suspense themes.
9. The Contrast of Beauty and Danger
Few places balance peaceful beauty and real risk as naturally as the PNW. A quiet shoreline can become a crime scene. A scenic trail can become a place of confrontation. Remote cabins face isolation from weather, fire, or even mechanical failure.
That contrast between beauty and danger heightens every emotional beat. Imagine an intrepid heroine admiring the majesty of a storm swollen stream pouring over a precipice as a killer sneaks up behind her…
10. It Feels Real
The Pacific Northwest isn’t an abstract setting—it’s vivid, specific, and grounded. Readers don’t have to imagine what cedar might smell like, the chill in the air, the sounds of water pounding against rock, or the stillness of a snow-blanketed forest. Real elements help create the danger, and that realism makes the scene feel personal and more immediate, which in turn makes the romance more meaningful.
The Pacific Northwest offers something rare in romantic suspense—a setting where atmosphere, danger, and emotion naturally work together. It doesn’t just support the story, it is an inseparable part of the action and adventure, naturally shaping the nature of the romance, especially for readers who enjoy the forced-proximity trope.
Where can you find these elements in the True North Brotherhood novels?
I’m so glad you asked.
Where Men Stand features big secrets, close knit community, and found family.
Kage: The 6th Commandment features small town secrets and long memories, a tightly knit community, found family, rugged landscapes, and isolation.
A Cedar Haven Christmas features a tightly knit community, found family, rugged landscapes, isolation, and weather challenges.
