Title: The Cowboy’s Bride Collection (9 Historical Romance
Novellas)
Authors: Susan Page Davis, Vickie McDonough, Nancy J.
Farrier, Miralee Ferrell,
Darlene
Franklin, Davalynn Spencer, Becca Whitham, Jaime Jo Wright,
and
Susanne Dietze
Pages: 448
Release Date: March 1, 2016
Genre: Historical Romance
Publisher: Barbour Books
Format: eBook (also available in paperback)
Note: I received a free eBook copy of this book through
NetGalley in exchange for my honest opinion.
About the book:
Ride onto the
open range alongside cowboys and cowgirls who embrace the adventures of living
in the Old West from Kansas to New Mexico, Colorado to Texas. Whether rounding
up cattle or mustangs, training horses, fending off outlaws, weathering storms,
competing in rodeos, or surviving drought these cowboys work hard each day. But
when hardheaded men have their weaknesses exposed by well-meaning women will
they stampeded away or will a lasting love develop? Find out in this exciting
collection of nine historical romances.
My review:
This is a
wonderful collection of short historical romances.
These great
novellas are all set in the time period from 1839-1895. The authors that were
brought together to write each of these stories is fantastic. Each writing
style is just different enough that you can easily tell they were written by
different people. I thoroughly enjoyed the accuracy to the time period for each
story. There is quite a variety of characters throughout these stories that
kept me interested in reading them.
Love’s Sweet Storm by Miralee Ferrell
I think that
the thing I liked the most about this story is that it was a great reminder of
the need to speak honestly about our feelings. We shouldn’t just go along with
what others have planned for us.
The Cowboy Poet by Susan Page Davis
The thing
that really caught my attention in this story was how teasing affects people,
even adults.
I really like the
fact that with these short stories it is easy to take just a little time each
day and finish a whole story in just a couple of days. They are brief escapes
from our everyday lives.
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