Untie My Heart – Book 3 in the Family Ties Series
Posted by Literary Titan

Untie My Heart, by Jansen Schmidt, follows Mesa Adler as she flees the wreckage of her old life with her traumatized five-year-old daughter, Merrick, and tries to begin again in a remote fixer-upper near Jackson Hole. Still haunted by the death of her husband, Erik, and by the damage his military trauma left behind, Mesa is determined to build something safe, quiet, and wholly her own. What she doesn’t expect is Noble Jabeaux, a patient contractor with jellybeans in his pocket, tenderness in his hands, and secrets of his own. As Mesa and Merrick slowly let him into their lives, the story widens from home renovation and fragile attraction into a tense custody fight with Erik’s mother, Sylvia, forcing everyone to confront grief, fear, loyalty, and the complicated work of choosing life after loss.
What moved me most about this book is how carefully it treats healing as something ordinary and physical, not just emotional. Mesa doesn’t magically recover because a good man arrives. She scrubs floors, pulls up filthy carpet, worries over paint colors, comforts a child who clings to a pink blanket, and tries to breathe through memories that still ambush her. Those domestic details give the novel its heartbeat. I loved how Merrick’s recovery comes in tiny, believable increments: a laugh in the backseat, a pinky promise, a ride on Sienna, the fierce comfort she finds in Noble’s presence. The purple jellybeans could’ve felt too cute in a lesser book, but here they become a small language of trust. I also appreciated that Mesa’s feelings for Noble are tangled with guilt rather than swept clean. Her attraction to him doesn’t erase Erik, and her anger at Erik doesn’t erase love. That emotional contradiction felt honest to me.
The writing has a warm, sensory fullness that suits the story’s western setting and wounded characters. I could feel the stale carpet dust, the cold bite of spring snow, the hush of the aspens, the awkward tenderness of a man trying not to move too fast around a frightened child. At times, the prose leans hard into internal explanation, and a few emotional beats are stated more than they need to be, especially when the characters circle the same fears. Noble can also feel almost impossibly attuned, a little too ready with the right word, the right gesture, the right protective instinct. Still, I found myself forgiving much of that because the book’s emotional architecture is so sincere. Its best ideas are quietly powerful: that grief can become a locked room, that love after death isn’t betrayal, that children notice safety before adults can explain it, and that community sometimes arrives in the form of diners, bikers, horses, lawyers, and people who simply refuse to let you suffer alone.
By the end, I felt that Untie My Heart had earned its title. It’s a romance, certainly, but I read it more as a story about loosening the knots trauma leaves in a family’s body and spirit. The book takes its time showing that tenderness doesn’t come easily, but must be fought for and chosen again and again. I’d recommend this to readers who enjoy contemporary western romance with serious emotional stakes, especially those drawn to stories about second chances, found family, military trauma, small-town support systems, and love that feels less like rescue than a steady hand held out in the dark.
Pages: 449 | ASIN : B0H4RVKQ7K
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About Literary Titan
The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.Posted on July 8, 2026, in Book Reviews, Four Stars and tagged author, Family Ties, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, bookshelf, booktube, booktuber, drama, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, Jansen Schmidt, kindle, kobo, literature, Literature & Fiction, Military Romance, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, romance, series, story, trailer, Untie My Heart, Untie My Heart Book 3 in the Family Ties Series, women's fiction, writer, writing. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.





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