About fifty percent of the time we choose books by the cover art, and about twenty-five percent of the time the author draws us. The other twenty-five percent? Those are books that are bundled in lots. We end up with them because we have no choice if want the other books in the group. Gail Jordan’s, aka Peggy Gaddis’s Once a Sinner is one of those. The cover art is blah, and we don’t seek out Jordan especially. But we dutifully read it.
It’s a melodrama about a war veteran who gets married overseas in England, much to the chagrin of his longtime sweetheart waiting back home. When the vet shows up with his new bride Heather, the other woman, Drusilla, sets about trying to ruin the marriage by any means necessary. Dru is stubborn, spoiled, arrogant, and sneaky, yet we liked her more than any of the other characters. That’s probably not what Jordan intended, and is definitely a symptom of a book not executed to the highest level. But for all that, it isn’t bad. Maybe we’ll try another effort from her down the line. Then again, maybe not.