Chronically low cattle prices and her father's skyrocketing medical bills may have forced Jessie Weaver to sell the ranch that's been in her family since the mid-1800s, but no way will she let developers wreak havoc with her glorious Montana mountains. So she writes conservation restrictions into the deed of sale—even though that means taking a huge loss in land value.
Even though Guthrie Sloane, her boyfriend, thinks she's dead wrong and it will mean the end of them as a couple.
He'll never abandon her
Hotheaded and old-fashioned, Guthrie may have disagreed with Jessie's dreams for her land and stormed off to Alaska in protest, but no way can he quit her.
Nadia went to the dogs at the age of 29 and currently operates a kennel of 40 Alaskan Huskies. She has raced for 15 years in northern New England and Canada, works at the family-owned Harraseeket Inn in Freeport, Maine, and is also a registered Maine guide. She began her writing career at the age of five, when she made her first sale, a short story called "The Bear," to her mother for 25 cents. This story was such a blockbuster that her mother bought every other story Nadia wrote, and kept her in ice cream money throughout much of her childhood.
I have to say that I wasn't very impressed by this book. When I read a Harlequin book I am really looking for romance with all of the heat, it was not found in this book. The characters weren't as believable as I would like them, they had almost a super endurance and move boulders feel to them and the first half of the book you are like dang, this girl has way too many men interested in her. It was good but not what I expected from the publisher.