

About the Book
Book: Arranged with the Earl
Series: Saving the Spinsters, Book 2
Author: Jackie Killelea
Genre: Christian Historical Romance
Release Date: May 13, 2025
A spinster with a tarnished reputation. An earl scarred from war. Can their convenient marriage withstand those aiming to steal everything they have?
Catherine Blynn resigned herself to a life without romantic love after a disastrous broken engagement. Although she’s always hoped to marry for affection, her father arranges for her to wed Loftus Cromwell, the broken Earl of Hardwicke. If she defies her parents, she risks her family’s ruin.
Loftus Cromwell had no intention to marry for love, only for the sake of his estate. But If he fails to win the love of his spirited and unconventional betrothed, he risks his conniving brother claiming everything he holds dear.
As treachery unfolds within the manor’s walls and a foe from Catherine’s past resurfaces, can Loftus and Catherine trust one another enough to unravel the truth before tragedy steals any chance of happiness?
About the Author

Jackie Killelea is a born and raised small-town girl from Connecticut with a degree in English and Creative Writing. She started off her writing journey with poetry, soon shifting into novels and becoming hooked. On days when she’s not busy with her nose in a book, she can be found typing away with a cup of tea at her side.
More from Jackie
In Arranged with the Earl, Loftus’ study of plants and flora is his foremost pastime, aside from his duties managing his estate and those that come along with being an earl. In his conservatory, there are a variety of different species of plants that he cares for but, would he actually have had these plants in his conservatory and would they have been able to feasibly grow there if he did?
Well, according to my research and a bit of wishful thinking…yes.
The thing is, Loftus has a few native plants in his conservatory and those certainly would have been able to grow there, given that they’ve pretty much just been brought inside from other counties in England. Loftus knows his home country and the landscape as well as how to care for those plants, already. The trickier plants to think upon are the exotics.
For instance, when showing Catherine the conservatory for the first time, he mentions Black Hellebore(Helleborus niger). How would he have come to own this? This plant is native to the mountains and woodlands of southern and central Europe, so we must assume that Loftus would’ve had it imported, or grown from seed. Still, would a woodland plant grow well enough to produce flowers in a conservatory setting?
Well, fortunately for Loftus, Black Hellebore actually grows fairly well in containers and does well in partial shade, so where he placed it in the conservatory was a prime location and it isn’t a stretch of the imagination to think that it produces blooms there.
With each plant I chose to be in the conservatory, I had to research if Loftus would reasonably have access to it and if it would grow under conservatory conditions–as well as during the season in which the book takes place. Of course you, as readers, will still need to use your imagination at some points. I’m sure Loftus would agree that ideas, like plants, need lots of water and space to grow.
I do so hope you enjoy Catherine and Loftus’ story in Arranged with the Earl!
Sincerely,
Jackie
Devoted to Hope's Review of Arranged with the Earl
He handed her his heart on a tray. And she prayed.
Some stories whisper something holy. This one reminded me what it looks like to love with courage and to trust God even when everything feels arranged by everyone but Him.
Catherine’s prayers weren’t polished. They were genuine. Authentic. Raw. Desperate. Surrendered. Heartfelt.
“Please let me find it. Please, God. Please.” That line didn’t feel like fiction. It felt like the author saw my heart.
And this: “An overwhelming sense of peace came over her...God would never let anything happen that she could not handle, for He was her Father...” That kind of peace doesn’t come from a convenient marriage or an unscarred life. It comes from knowing Who is just and sovereign.
What surprised me was how gently the love unfolded. Not rushed. Not expected. Just quietly brave and beautiful.
“He’d shared a piece of his heart with her. He’d put it on a tray...and he’d waited to see what she did with it.”
Isn’t that how we all hope to be received?
This story didn’t sanitize suffering or tie faith into tidy bows. It let the ache breathe. It let the questions stay a little longer. But in the middle of the heartbreak, one truth rose steady and unshaken: “God has saved you for a reason.”
And I felt that—not just for these characters, but for me. For you. For all of us who wonder if the breaking disqualifies us from being used. It doesn’t. Not with Him.
The writing? Beautiful. The characters? Wonderfully flawed. The heartbeat? A steady reminder of the God who redeems even the most reluctant yes.
A story I’ll carry with me. One I deeply loved and wholeheartedly recommend.
I received a digital version of this book from Celebrate Lit Publicity Group. I am not required to write a positive review nor paid to do so. This is my honest and unbiased review. My thoughts and opinions expressed in this book review are my own. My review focuses on writing and story’s content, ensuring transparency and reliability.
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