She has a color-coded binder for every crisis. He has a talent for creating new ones.
Grace Calloway has built her career on flawless weddings. As Savannah’s most sought-after wedding planner, she has orchestrated hundreds of happily-ever-afters — but her own love life remains carefully, deliberately blank. After a broken engagement left her faith bruised and her heart walled behind spreadsheets and timelines, Grace has decided that love is best left to other people. She’ll plan it. She won’t live it.
Then she meets Eli Mercer.
Groomsman, carpenter, and the most unhurried man Grace has ever encountered, Eli steps off the shuttle twenty minutes late with sawdust on his jacket and a grin that suggests he considers this entirely on schedule. He is everything Grace’s color-coded world is not: spontaneous, warm, and irritatingly at peace with a God she is no longer sure is paying her any personal attention.
But as the Hargrove-Bennett wedding unfolds in a cascade of missing rings, a runaway flower girl, a missing cake, and one spectacular thunderstorm, Grace and Eli find themselves solving crises side by side — and something far more dangerous than chaos begins to bloom between them.
Eli carries his own scars. A past mistake cost him someone he loved, and he has spent years wondering whether he is allowed to want love again. Grace carries hers too — a faith that once burned bright now feels like embers she’s afraid to breathe on.
In a story woven through with grace, forgiveness, and the breathtaking belief that God restores what we thought was lost forever, Something Borrowed, Something Blue asks the question neither of them dared ask alone:
What if the love you spent years planning around was the one God had been planning for you all along?
Warm, witty, and deeply moving. A Christian romance you’ll read in one sitting and think about for weeks.









