Outlaws Bride by Joan Johnston
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Cover: 5/5 (great detail from book featured!)
Story: 4/5
Steam: 🔥 🔥 (+kissing, fade outs, fade ins)
Ending: HEA
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Stand Alone or Series: Stand alone. Loosely connected to "The Barefoot Bride."
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Texas, Reconstruction Era (1870s)
Falsely Accused Man
Besotted Young Woman
Age Gap
Unrequited Love
They Team Up
American Western HR
Age Gap (29f/32m)
Family in Plot
Danger & Peril
Decades Long Grudge
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**Please see the courtesy content warning for this book near the end of the review before reading**
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Here is the thing, I was here for the plot more than the romance by a long shot with "Outlaw's Bride." While I don't have any "triggers" within books and other media, this book isn't for the faint of heart as it centers around a nearly two decades crime to which the hero, Ethan, has been falsely linked to. While he did serve time for the death of a neighbor he accidentally caused, the entire town still believes he committed and got away with, a grizzly crime that left a now 30-year-old woman with the mind of a 13-year-old girl. This book is heavy on the mystery plot with the romantic storyline being a bonus.
This is an age-gap romance, which is not unusual for a historical romance. Usually, I can look past the age gap with no issue, and for the most part, I was able to do just that while reading this book. However, the author chose to repeatedly mention how Ethan knew Patch not only as a small child but also as a small child in which he changed the diapers. Ethan always knew Patch as a young teenager in which he remembers having "budding breasts." Keep in mind he was 25 years old at the time. I'm not sorry, but it was a weird choice to write the age gap as it was written. If these odd passages had not been included, this book would have likely been a five-star read. Even in the early 1990s, it was creepy.
An interesting this about this book is that it features multiple POVs in which Johnston excelled at flipping between without the reader ever being confused as to which character's mind we were in. As this book centered so much on the mystery plot, I feel the more than average multiple POV use was incredibly important.
There are so many twists and turns in this book! It kept my attention and had me on the edge of my seat. The sense of danger slowly creeps up on you. Looking back, you can tell who the villain is in the story early on, but while reading, Johnston had me asking myself if it could truly be the person I thought it was. The villain is a real creep and you can't help but wonder what else he has done that no one knows about.
I would also like to note that the ending is rather abrupt. I wish there had been an epilogue.
As for steam, Johnston uses non-explicit language. Scenes are brief but still open door.
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Read as a physical copy.
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Content Warning-
**Courtesy warning that this book largely centers around the S.A. of a minor female, including recollection of events displayed on page.
CW from this point on may contain spoilers):
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S.A of minor female
Cruel treatment of a person with mental differences
G*n vi*lence and injury
Physical vi*lence
S.A of minor female- on page, as a memory with details of crime
Attempted S.A- on page
De*th by g*n- on page
Attempted m*rder- on page, multiple
De*th of animal- cat and mouse