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Rachael Johns

Author of The Patterson Girls

44 Works 1,026 Members 79 Reviews

About the Author

Rachael Johns is an Australian author. She holds a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Writing and English. After writing for almost ten years, she focused her work on rural romance and women's fiction and became a member of the Romance Writers of Australia. Jilted (her first rural romance) won Favourite show more Australia Contemporary Romance in 2012. In 2013 she was voted in Booktopia's Top Ten Favourite Aussie Authors. She won the 2015 Australian Romance Readers Awards for Favourite Short or Category Romance for her book Fire Me Up and in the Favourite Contemporary Romance category with her book The Patterson Girls. The 2016 Australian Book Industry Awards named The Patterson Girls, General fiction book of the year. Her other books include Stand-in Star, One Perfect Night, Man-Drought, The Kissing Season, Tease Me Cowboy, Outback Dreams, Outback Blaze, Outback Ghost, The Next Season, The Road to Hope, Kiss the Bride, Casey, Outback Sisters, and Talk of the Town. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Works by Rachael Johns

The Patterson Girls (2015) 74 copies, 3 reviews
The Art of Keeping Secrets (2016) 68 copies, 6 reviews
Jilted (2012) 68 copies, 8 reviews
The Other Bridget (2024) 56 copies, 1 review
Just One Wish (2019) 50 copies, 2 reviews
Lost Without You (2018) 49 copies, 2 reviews
The Greatest Gift (2017) 48 copies, 1 review
Outback Dreams (2013) 45 copies, 3 reviews
Outback Sisters (2016) 43 copies, 3 reviews
Man Drought (2013) 41 copies, 2 reviews
Flying the Nest (2020) 41 copies, 3 reviews
Outback Blaze (2014) 40 copies, 2 reviews
Outback Ghost (2014) 37 copies, 2 reviews
Outback Secrets (2021) 32 copies, 1 review
How to Mend a Broken Heart (2021) 31 copies, 3 reviews
Talk of the Town (2017) 31 copies, 1 review
The Road to Hope (2015) 26 copies, 2 reviews
One Perfect Night (2011) 24 copies, 7 reviews
The Bad Bridesmaid (2025) 23 copies
Fire Me Up (2015) 20 copies, 8 reviews
Kiss the Bride (2015) 16 copies, 6 reviews
Stand-In Star (2013) 15 copies, 4 reviews
The Work Wives (2022) 14 copies, 2 reviews
A Dog and a Diamond (2016) 10 copies, 1 review
A Very Country Christmas (2017) — Author — 8 copies
The Single Dad's Family Recipe (2018) 8 copies, 1 review
It's not you, it's her (2016) 6 copies
Something to Talk About (2021) 6 copies
Tease Me, Cowboy (2014) 5 copies, 1 review
The Lucky Sisters (2025) 4 copies
The Kissing Season (2013) 4 copies, 1 review
Pregnant by Mr. Wrong (2017) 4 copies, 1 review
His Only Valentine (13-in-1) (2015) — Contributor — 3 copies
The Davis Sisters (2016) 3 copies
The Next Season (novella) (2014) 2 copies, 1 review
Forever Yours: A Wedding Collection [7-in-1] (2016) — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female
Nationality
Australia
Places of residence
Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Associated Place (for map)
Western Australia, Australia

Members

Reviews

88 reviews
How to Mend a Broken Heart is a not-quite sequel to Rachael Johns’ The Art of Keeping Secrets. I always felt that there was more to be explored, as Felicity (Flick) ended up with more dilemmas at the conclusion. This novel is all about Flick and her growth after her split from her husband and her children leaving home. It’s not a typical empty nester story, rather it’s much more exciting partially due to it being set in New Orleans.

With the current limitations on travel, any armchair show more travel is welcome and How to Mend a Broken Heart has it in spades. Partially a love letter to New Orleans, it explains in great detail the French Quarter, its nightlife, the Garden District and the food. (Seeing as the closest I’ll get to New Orleans for a long time is this book, I tried making beignets – little square donuts. They were delicious!) I did stop several times to Google various places and foods the characters saw, which is always the sign of a great book (i.e. one that entices you to learn more). However, it’s not just the setting that makes this book loads of fun but the plot too. Flick is a taxidermist and the story goes into some detail (but not squeamishly) about her job and what it entails. It also involves romance and friendship as she becomes more involved in life on Bourbon Street. For Flick’s daughter Zoe, New Orleans is the place she runs to after the demise of her marriage. Zoe has a very different experience of New Orleans, including the drinking, dancing and nightlife. She’s looking to forget, and it seems this is the place. But then Zoe finds friends in Jack, ghost hunter and Aurelia, eccentric artist and her life takes a different turn. But both mum and daughter have secrets, as do their new friends. Can they move past them to move forward?

How to Mend a Broken Heart is easily read and understood without reading The Art of Keeping Secrets. (In fact, I think it’s a stronger novel). The characters, setting and plot are all incredibly interesting, yet not totally out of the realm of real issues. It’s easy to relate to both Zoe and Flick’s methods of dealing with heartbreak (some more conventional than others) and seeing them heal and grow made me feel rather proud of them. I would have loved to know a bit more about Jack and his life in an Amish community, but maybe that could be in a future novel. I felt that Aurelia’s story was very sensitively told, as was that of Zoe’s dad. The story absolutely hummed with the author’s love of New Orleans, which now sounds to me like somewhere worth a visit one day! (If only just to eat). Overall, it’s a story that reminds you – how good is reading?!

Thank you to Harlequin for the copy of this book. My review is honest.

http://samstillreading.wordpress.com
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Just One Wish by Rachael Johns is a wonderful contemporary family drama contrasting the life experiences and choices of three generations of women.

“If I’ve realised one thing—perhaps too late—it’s that life isn’t black and white. It’s a million shades of grey and there isn’t one truth that fits everyone.”

Journalist Geraldine ‘Ged’ Johnston is heartbroken when her lover, and colleague, Carlos, announces his intention to move back in with his ex-wife for the sake of their show more children. Fortuitously, her grandmother, Alice Abbott who Ged calls Gralice, surprises her, and Ged’s mother, Sappho known as Marie, with a timely distraction, a three day Elvis themed cruise to celebrate Alice’s 80th birthday. Ged plans to use the opportunity to interview Gralice for a biography she hopes to publish detailing her grandmother’s many achievements as a feminist trailblazer, while her mother views the trip as fodder for her popular ‘Happy, happy Housewife’ online media persona, but Gralice has a hidden motive for the trip, a secret that will prove to have unexpected consequences for all of them.

“In a matter of a month my life had become a soap opera—one in which I’d been forced to take a starring role when I didn’t even want to watch the show.”

Set in Victoria, Just One Wish unfolds from the first person perspective of Geraldine as her life, and the life of her family, is upended by a series of surprises. I enjoyed the complications and drama cantering around three very different, interesting women and the choices they make.

“‘I reckon no matter what choices we make in our lives, we’ll never know for sure if they are the right ones....”

The author touches on a wide spectrum of themes including family, marriage, relationships, feminism, euthanasia, homosexuality, and social media, but it’s Johns’ exploration of the differing ambitions of Alice, Marie, and Ged that I found the most relatable. My mother, whose traditional father felt that teaching or nursing were the only acceptable professions for a woman until she married, has always been ambitious, and worked full time in a number of careers until retirement. I greatly admire her drive, but I know she was disappointed when I chose to go into teaching, married young, and then later became a stay at home mother to four children (and wanted more). My eldest daughter is now in her early twenties, and though she is not ambitious exactly, neither marriage nor children are on her radar. So, I identify with the tension between the three women, borne of generational and personal ideals.

Written with heart and humour, Just One Wish is an entertaining and thought provoking read that will appeal to women of all ages.

P.S. Rachael, hope you don’t mind but I was thinking Jay = Ditch Davey circa Sea Patrol ;)
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“Sometimes what you think is going to be the most painful time of your life, simply turns out to be the storm before the rainbow.”

Readers familiar with The Art of Keeping Secrets will recognise How To Mend a Broken Heart’s main protagonist, Felicity Bell. It’s been four years since her divorce after Felicity found she couldn’t reconcile the changes in their relationship wrought by her husband’s gender transition. Though the two have remained friends, and Flick is supportive of show more Sofia, she struggles with the continual reminders of the life she has lost. When an unexpected opportunity arises for taxidermist Felicity to take three month position at Bourbon Street Taxidermy Art, a small store in the heart of the French Quarter of New Orleans, she seizes the chance, hoping to spend some time focusing on herself.

How To Mend A Broken Heart explores the themes of heartbreak, self discovery and moving on as Felicity learns to let go of the past and explore new possibilities. I thought Johns portrayal of the complicated relationship Flick has with her ex to be sensitive and honest. Johns portrayal of Flick’s struggle to trust in love again is sincere and poignant as the protagonist’s romantic relationship blooms with Theo, the handsome owner of the bar that neighbours the taxidermy store.

Felicity is just beginning to find her feet in New Orleans when her daughter unexpectedly appears on her doorstep. Zoe’s husband of four years has left her after confessing to an affair and, and she is devastated by her childhood sweetheart’s betrayal. Zoe too is now confronted with the challenge of recovering from heartbreak and forging a new life for herself. It’s easy to sympathise with Zoe whose faith in love, and herself, is shattered. She makes a mistake or two in her effort to forget the anguish, taking advantage of the French Quarter’s nightlife, but at least one turns out to be quite serendipitous.

Johns introduces the elderly Aurelia Harranibar, a cantankerous, reclusive local artist whose own life has been marred by her inability to move on from the loss of her sweetheart. Modelled on the Charles Dickens character Miss Havisham, Miss H lives alone in a decaying mansion in the New Orleans Garden District. When she is accidentally injured during a visit to the taxidermy store, Zoe, an aspiring artist herself, volunteers to assist Miss H at home and forges a sweet relationship with the eccentric old woman. Miss H becomes a key figure in the story, not only serving as an example of what failing to accept the demise of a relationship and move on could look like, but her past also introduces a thread of mystery as Zoe tries to determine what really happened to the artist’s lover.

It’s New Orleans, arguably America’s most haunted locale, so there is no surprise that Johns includes a tiny hint of the supernatural in the story. Zoe believes Miss H’s house is haunted by more than the artist’s sadness. I enjoyed accompanying the characters on a ghost tour of the city, and learning of the tragedy of ‘The Casket Girls’. Felicity’s unusual occupation also plays well into the mystique of the city, which the author describes vividly, and with obvious affection for all of its atmosphere and eccentricities, despite its darker side.

How To Mend a Broken Heart is a heartfelt and entertaining novel set in a vibrant location, sure to have wide appeal.
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Flying The Nest is an engaging women’s fiction novel from bestselling Australian author Rachael Johns.

Ashling Wood is blindsided when her husband of twenty years casually suggests they try nest parenting while she’s busy preparing the oranges for their daughter’s soccer game. Her first instinct is to believe Adrian doesn’t understand what the term means, but he’s clear, he wants a trial separation and feels nest parenting, where the children remain in the house and the parents move show more in and out on an alternate schedule, is the best solution for them all.
The adjustment is difficult for a heartbroken Ashling who misses her children, ten year old Payton and fourteen year old Saxon, when she’s not with them. Taking on the renovation of a friends seaside cottage in Ragged Point during her ‘off’ weeks is a welcome distraction, and though she is certain the arrangement will not be anything but temporary, as the house undergoes a transformation, so too does Ashling.

I can’t imagine what it would be like should my husband so casually and carelessly announce one ordinary morning that he wanted a separation (touch wood). My sympathy was definitely reserved for Ashling from the start, and even though she seemed stuck in the denial phase for slightly too long, I think Johns portrayal of her character’s emotional state was sensitive and believable. There was a brutal scene in the marriage counselor’s office in particular where I really felt Ashling’s pain, and I was glad she finally got angry at Adrian, and found the impetus to take charge of her life.

The community of Ragged Point is a delightful haven for Ashling. Johns deftly creates the character of a small coastal community, and it’s there that she rediscovers, and is able to nurture, the parts of herself that have been dormant while helping her husband build their podiatry business, and raising their children. I liked the development of Ashling’s relationships with Jedda and Dan, who are great supports, but also have interesting stories of their own that add depth to the story.

Written with heart, humour, and warmth, Flying the Nest is sure to resonate with women who need to redefine their lives, whether because of a relationship breakdown, children leaving home, or other change of circumstances. Ashling’s journey is not without its challenges, but it is ultimately rewarding and inspiring, as is this novel.
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Statistics

Works
44
Members
1,026
Popularity
#25,102
Rating
4.1
Reviews
79
ISBNs
263

Charts & Graphs