Cowboy Strong is the seventh title in Carolyn Brown's Longhorn Canyon series, and the sixth novel in the series I've read. While I'm a fan of Ms. Brown's, and love a friends-to-lovers romance, it's the fake marriage aspect of this novel that I wasn't thrilled with, although there was certainly a good reason given for it. That, and a couple of other slight missteps are the reason for my 4-star, rather than 5-star rating.
As far as main characters go, I really liked Paxton and Alana. They've known each other forever, living on neighboring ranches. Faced with her father's imminent death from an aggressive brain cancer (her mother died when Alana was a mere child), she wanted to fulfill her father, Matt's, dream of walking her down the aisle. Matt was given only 6 weeks to live, but Alana hasn't been seriously dating anyone, and so she convinces her long-time frenemy, Paxton, to help her convince her father that they've been secretly dating, and are secretly engaged. Once Matt passes, they've agreed to have their fake marriage annulled, but will they?
Matt is thrilled to hear the news of their engagement and immediately takes over the small, intimate wedding Pax and Alana wanted, and turns it into a mega-wedding. The wedding planning and details made Matt happy, and that's what Alana wanted for him, but her feelings of guilt about lying to her dying father, which ran throughout this novel, became a bit overdone and her doubts about the entire scheme became somewhat irritating after a time. Thankfully, it was overshadowed by Pax and Alana's growing attraction to one another, and their reluctance to admit it to each other. As expected, sex enters into the picture between these two likable characters, but it was fairly tame and mostly glossed over, something I've also come to expect in Ms. Brown's novels.
I love the sense of small-town life Ms. Brown always infuses in her novels, and the willingness of the many secondary characters to participate in the wedding, most of whom know nothing of Matt's diagnosis or the fake engagement and marriage. Of course, characters from previous novels appear, but as the wedding draws near and the bridesmaids and groomsmen all arrive (12 of them), trying to keep straight who was whom was a bit daunting for me, and I can't imagine how difficult it might be if you were reading this novel without having read the previous ones in this series. Cowboy Strong can be read as a standalone, but I don't recommend doing so.
Thankfully there was an epilogue 18 months after the HEA wedding, but I felt that Matt's eventual death was given short shrift--pretty much ignored, as was letter Matt gave to Alana, that had been written by her mother prior to her mother's death and was to be given to Alana on her wedding day--the contents were ignored. Personally, I would have loved to learned the contents of that letter and Alana's reaction to reading it become part of this story--I felt somewhat let-down that Ms. Brown simply dropped the ball by not including either Matt's death or the contents of that letter. As someone who unexpectedly lost her own mother at age 15, such a letter from my mother would have been a treasure.
I still enjoyed this novel, despite its few missteps. It was a good read, and I'm recommend it because Ms. Brown is an excellent writer, but I strongly suggest reading this series in the order it was written.
I voluntarily read an advance reader copy of this novel. The opinions stated are my own.