A reluctant daughter. A dutiful wife. A mystery of the ages.
Languedoc, France, 2018
Historian Madeleine Winters would rather research her next project than rehash the strained relationship she had with her late mother. However, to claim her inheritance, she reluctantly agrees to stay the one year required in her late mother’s French home and begins renovations. But when she’s haunted by a female voice inside the house and tremors emanating from beneath her kitchen floorboards, she’s shocked to discover ancient human bones.
The Mediterranean coast, AD 777
Seventeen-year-old Nanthild is wise enough to know her place. Hiding her Pagan wisdom and dutifully accepting her political marriage, she’s surprised when she falls for her Christian husband, the Count of Carcassonne. But she struggles to keep her forbidden religious beliefs and her healing skills secret while her spouse goes off to fight in a terrible, bloody war.
As Maddie settles into her rustic village life, she becomes obsessed with unraveling the mysterious history buried in her new home. And when Nanthild is caught in the snare of an envious man, she’s terrified she’ll never embrace her beloved again.
Can two women torn apart by centuries help each other finally find peace?
Love Lost in Time is a vivid standalone historical fiction novel for fans of epoch-spanning enigmas. If you like dark mysteries, romantic connections, and hints of the paranormal, then you’ll adore Cathie Dunn’s tale of redemption and self-discovery.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Where Memory Stirs and Time Refuses to Stay Silent
I finished Love Lost in Time with that lingering, unsettled feeling you get when a story seeps under your skin rather than simply ending. This isn’t a gentle time-slip romance that drifts politely between eras. It pulls—through stone, earth, scent, and memory—until past and present are no longer willing to stay separate.
The dual timelines move with quiet confidence. One moment you’re in modern-day southern France, dealing with grief, inheritance, and a stubbornly uncooperative house; the next, you’re deep in eighth-century Septimania, where marriage is politics, faith is power, and a woman’s knowledge can be both a gift and a death sentence. The transitions feel inevitable, as if the story itself has decided these lives must touch, whether the characters are ready or not.
At the heart of the novel are two romances that mirror and challenge each other. Hilda and Bellon’s relationship is shaped by duty, fear, and an undercurrent of desire neither quite knows how to name. Their connection doesn’t bloom easily—it’s restrained, tense, and charged with what remains unsaid. In the present, Maddie and Léon’s slow-burn attraction is grounded, hesitant, and deeply human, unfolding amid renovation dust, village gossip, and emotional scars that haven’t quite healed. In both timelines, love isn’t a safe haven; it’s a vulnerability.
What gives the story its power is its atmosphere. The past doesn’t announce itself loudly—it seeps in through lavender-scented air, shifting ground, flashes of vision, and the uneasy sense of standing somewhere that remembers more than it should. History here isn’t confined to books or ruins; it’s alive, watching, and waiting to be uncovered. Sometimes literally from beneath the floor.
Despite spanning centuries, the story never feels distant or academic. Emotions are immediate, choices feel heavy, and consequences loom. The women at its centre are navigating worlds that would rather define them than listen to them, and their struggle for autonomy—across time—gives the novel its quiet, relentless drive.
Love Lost in Time is rich, immersive, and emotionally layered. It’s a story about inheritance in every sense of the word: land, memory, love, and the things that refuse to stay buried. I closed the book with the understanding that the past was far from finished—and that it could not be ignored forever.
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