Well, it turns out I have a soft-spot for small-town cowboy stories. Who knew? Even if that weren't the case, however, I suspect I'd still like this book. The lead characters, Luke and Shannon, have depth and draw sympathy almost from the start. And their development through the novel (both individually and together) was fantastic.
I'm less sanguine about the town of Rainbow Valley, though it didn't suck. It was . . . sparsely populated if that makes any sense. We didn't get to know more than a handful of people, even peripherally, and those we did know lacked depth as more than a sketch, really. Oh, there were some stand-outs like Cynthia the dental office manager and Eve, Shannon's sister. Oh, and Todd the kid and his grandma at the general store. But in the main, the townspeople were kind of lifeless and seemed to exist more for brief story moments than for anything self-supporting. And yeah, that seems like I described a lot of personality, but in a book this long and encompassing as much as it did, we really should have had more, I think.
Which is a shame given that Luke has a deep-seated antagonism with the town that failed him so spectacularly as a kid. It was hard to get a read on the town as a whole and thus understand Luke's relationship to it, how much was justified, and how much merely good people failing as good people sometimes do. Yes, his relationship with Shannon was more important, but I still felt like I needed a read on if (and how) he could make a place for himself there—which he'd need to do for them to be together given how important her animal shelter was to her on a deeply emotional level.
I found I couldn't help liking Shannon in spite of her motivations in many ways. As broken as Luke is, Shannon's almost as damaged, what with her deep-seated neediness and sense of useless obligation to people who really mean nothing to her (and, more importantly, who don't really care for her terribly, either). Her relationship with her mother is nine kinds of messed up and in some truly creepy ways. I kept waiting for Shannon to develop a backbone and send her various parasites scampering and it took way too long for this to happen. That usually drives me bonkers, but I found myself rooting for Shannon through it all and I'm not sure what made the difference. Maybe it was her innate morality and care for those she loves. Or her willingness to love Luke unquestioningly despite his outcast status. Or her emotional fearlessness when the chips are truly down.
Anyway, two deeply broken people find strength in each other. That's a story that grabs me every time and Graves pulls it off well, here. Add the second-chances theme and you have a story guaranteed to catch my interest. And qualms aside, the hard fact of it is that I had a hard time putting it down and that's always a good sign.
A note about Steamy: Mid-range for my steam level. Two explicit scenes, both with some length. Not much fooling around (though a bit), but what was there was pretty hot.