We all could use a WARRIOR like the hero is this book.
This was a reprint of original I wanted to reread. It has held up and was again a good read.
Quick Read. Good story line. Enjoyed
Tightly drawn characters set in mountains of Colorado; a wildlife biologist and an ex-commando meet and find common ground in their understanding of animal behavior. The ex-commando is a wounded warrior who protects himself from hurt much as an injured animal would. The biologist is accepting and loves him anyway.
Wonderful writing about the outdoors and the people who understand the environment.
Wonderful writing about the outdoors and the people who understand the environment.
When wildlife biologist Eden Summers arrives in the Colorado Rockies, she has only one thing on her mind: to continue her research on the local cougar population. A capable woman, used to living and working alone in the wild, she is self-possessed and confident, able to handle any threat from nature's fiercest predators -- until she gazes into the eyes of Nevada Blackthorn.
She pulled him, injured and bleeding, to safety in the middle of a storm, unleashing a man who would invade her deepest dreams. But Nevada -- a rancher by trade, a warrior by nature -- is a man who has learned that walking away from caring is the only key to survival and that only the strongest survive. Any woman fool enough to try and change him will be hurt -- badly -- for their efforts.
Perhaps Eden is that kind of fool. Or perhaps she has no choice but to follow a calling as fierce, as wild and as natural as the beating of her own heart . . .
She pulled him, injured and bleeding, to safety in the middle of a storm, unleashing a man who would invade her deepest dreams. But Nevada -- a rancher by trade, a warrior by nature -- is a man who has learned that walking away from caring is the only key to survival and that only the strongest survive. Any woman fool enough to try and change him will be hurt -- badly -- for their efforts.
Perhaps Eden is that kind of fool. Or perhaps she has no choice but to follow a calling as fierce, as wild and as natural as the beating of her own heart . . .