Baroness of the Klondike - as cruel and as beautiful as the frozen landscape she'd sworn to rule by fair means or foul
America's purchase of Alaska from Russia, called "Seward's Folly" after the Secretary of State who masterminded the negotiations, drew a raging army of speculators, thieves, dreamers, prostitutes and gamblers, when word came of a gold strike in the Klondike. Among them was the tall, muscular young man who gave his name as Bryan Mathews, whom the Eskimo women called "the Man-God."
Baroness Irina Feodorovna and her equally spectacular daughter, Milla, wanted Mathews for entirely different reasons. Milla saw him as the love of her life. Irina saw him as a key - not only to unlock the pent-up passions of her magnificent body, but as a key through which she could control and rule the secret riches of this frozen kingdom called Alaska.
For this volume, "Lee Davis Willoughby" is actually author Barry Myers.
Going to Alaska this summer -s o found the towns and development of Alaska through the gold rush very interesting. Characters larger than life. Bryan Mathews - on the run from a gang in Oklahoma - arrives in Alaska, making friends along the way with Umalti, an eskimo. Baroness Irina seeks to use Bryan to further her greed, while her daughter Milla falls in love with Bryan.