
Born of Gilded Mountains by Amanda Dykes
Stand-alone Novel
Publisher: Bethany House Publishers, June 18, 2024
REVIEW BY JOAN HALL
Born of Gilded Mountains is a story of friendship, love, faith, betrayal, healing, and forgiveness with secrets and a mystery interwoven. The book opens with a boyhood pact made in 1894 by the light of a blood moon.
From there, it switches to 1948 when Mercy Windsor (aka Marybeth Spatts) travels via train (The Galloping Goose) to the small mountain town of Mercy Peak, Colorado. Mercy, once Hollywood’s Golden Girl is “escaping” her life to settle in the small mountain town. She buys an old estate that once belonged to an eccentric member of a once-prominent Mercy Peak family.
Right away, we know something bad happened to Mercy in California. There are bandages on her hands, she only has a small number of clothes—ones she obtained from the wardrobe of the movie studio where she was once employed—and very little money. Even though she wants to hide away (and hide her identity) she soon learns the citizens of Mercy Peak are friendly and caring.
In Mercy Peak, the fingerprints of God himself are impressed upon the mountains.
Amanda Dyes, Born of Guilded Mountains
Mercy had always desired to visit Mercy Peak, the home of her childhood pen-pal, Ruby (Rusty) Bright. Her moving to the area is bittersweet since Rusty is no longer around. Still, determined to rebuild her life, she settles into the old mansion and gets a job in a local grocery store and soon begins to unravel a mystery.
Mercy discovers that Rusty is still very much alive and together the two of them begin to unravel a series of riddles and clues that could lead to a decade old mystery of a missing Galloping Goose Railcar, and a hidden treasure.
There is a cast of characters—each with a story of his or her own. Like Casey Campbell who lost his only brother.
“How do you make it through? I don’t know that we ever do. Through sounds like there’s an end to the loss, and I can tell you right now I’m never going to forget Cal or stop missing him. I’ll never be who I was before he was gone. So, in a way, his absence will always be a part of me. That piece won’t come back. I’ll never be . . . complete, so to speak. But . . . I can be whole. Even while missing him. The day I stop missing him, please bash me over the head with a skillet or something.”
Amanda Dykes, Born of Guilded Mountains
References to Christianity are subtle but undoubtedly readers can see the God’s grace manifested throughout.
At first, I was a bit confused by the author’s writing style. The book contains portions of letters that Mercy and Rusty wrote to one another, a screenplay, notes of a Hollywood reporter’s interview with Mercy, and bits of newspaper headlines about Mercy’s disappearance. Trust me, there is a reason the author used various formats to tell the story.
I read this book slowly, but it kept me riveted, and is quite possibly my favorite read of 2024. I give Born of Gilded Mountains a well-deserved five fish.

I purchased the Kindle version of Born of Guilded Mountains through Amazon.
Joan, you always find good mystery stories even when the book isn’t categorized as a mystery. Hidden treasure and a lost railcar? Cool. I love the idea of epistolary bits mixed in with the regular storytelling mode, and the setting sounds beautiful. I think I’d thoroughly enjoy Born of Gilded Mountain. This one’s going on my TBR. Great review!
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I do love a good mystery and was excited to discover one within the pages of this book. I think you’ll like this one, Priscilla.
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What Priscilla says. 😉😍
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Thanks so much!
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A book that caused you to shift into low and under while you continued to read. That it kept you riveted shows the author’s skill. Thanks for sharing your insights, Joan! I’ll check it out…
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I enjoy a well-written slow paced book from time to time. I savored this one. Thanks, Grant.
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I’ve added texts, letters, newspaper articles, etc. to work, but only in snippets. Doing so as a vehicle to carry the story sounds fascinating to me. Thanks for sharing this one, Joan.
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I’ve done the same, Staci (letters, journals, etc.) This book was different but each element blended together at the end.
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Great review, Joan. I enjoy books that provide information from letters, newspaper articles, etc. It makes the story more interesting as everything begins to come together. You’ve made me interested in this book. Thanks!
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This book worked well in doing that. I’ve used snippets of journals or magazine articles in books, but not to this extent. However, everything wove together to create a satisfying read. Thanks, Steve.
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Wow, sounds like an amazing read, Joan! Your review definitely hit all the right notes for me. I’m adding Born of Gilded Mountains to my read list.
And I just realized I have a paperback copy of another of Amanda Dykes books waiting for me as well. Your review also just bumped that one higher on my TBR.
Excellent review, and I love that gorgeous book cover!
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This was my first time to read anything she’s written, but I’ll definitely be checking into reading more of her books. Thanks, Mae.
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Great review. You have well and truly intrigued me.
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Thank you, Jacqie!
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I just read Whose Waves These Are, the first of Amanda Dykes’ books that I’ve ever tried, and WOW, it was powerful. I’ve got a few more of hers sitting in her TBR, and it sounds like Born of Gilded Mountains will be just as good as her debut.
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I’m certainly going to be checking out more of her books, Hannah. Born of Gilded Mountains was my first by Amanda. Even the title of the one you mentioned intrigues me.
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What a stunning cover, Joan! That certainly caught my eye, then your review sealed it for me. Sounds like a wonderful read! Thank you for sharing.
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Just clicked over. The price stopped me in my tracks. Maybe it will eventually show up on KU.
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I didn’t pay that much for the book. Maybe it will go on sale later. I don’t blame you for waiting.
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I absolutely loved the cover, Jan. (As well as the story.)
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Great review and recommendation, Joan. I love the cover, too.
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I’m one of those readers who does judge a book by it’s cover. This one was superb! Thanks, Denise.
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It sure pulls you in!
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A great review for a book with a beautiful cover. Thanks for the rec, Joan!
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Thank you, Teri. A lot of people have expressed how much they liked the cover.
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Wonderful review, Joan. Your explanation of why you stayed with the story, even though it was confusing, convinced me of the writer’s skill. I’ll check it out for sure! Thank you for sharing this with us.
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Thank you, Gwen. The first couple of times it happened, I was slightly jolted from the story, but not enough to stop reading. IMO, it was well worth sticking with.
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Greatest review
Five Fish Rating—I love this. Thanks so much hugs sounds like a book I’d love with the epistolary bits within. It’s a style I like. Thanks for sharing.
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You’re welcome, Selma. I really enjoyed this book.
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Your favorite read so far for 2024 is high praise, Joan. Your review is lovely and gives a glimpse into the book’s tone. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and your strong recommendation. 🙂 I hope everything is going well for you. Have a great week!
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Thank you, Diana. Things are going well for me. I really enjoyed this book, but of course you wouldn’t guess that from my review. 🙂
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Ha! And great to hear, Joan.
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