Good but Not Great Continuation of Series.
"Savage Winter" by Constance O'Banyon is the second book in her "Savage Seasons of Blackfoot" series, and while the book is good, it's not as good as "Savage Autumn" in part because of the actions of the hero, Windhawk.
The Story: "Savage Winter" begins two years after "Savage Autumn" ended. Joanna James and her husband, Windhawk, chief of a Blood Blackfoot Indian tribe, have lived happily over the last two years, and Joanna discovers that she is going to have a baby. However, their happiness is threatened by malevolent forces, both new and old, who sow the seeds of mistrust and hatred and force the couple to face great challenges to their marriage and love for each other. The first of these enemies is Howard Landon, husband of Joanna and her brother Tag's aunt, Margaret. (In "Savage Autumn, Margaret and Howard tried to get their hands on the James family fortune. They failed, in part because Joanna and Tag escaped their greedy, and in the case of Howard, lecherous, clutches. Howard has killed Margaret, believing that if he did so, he would inherit Joanna and Tag's money. What he didn't count on, however, is a codicil in Russell James' will stating that the bulk of the money is to be held in trust for Tag until he turns 21.) Howard wants the money and Joanna, whom he lusts after, so he concocts a plan to have Joanna and Tag kidnapped and brought back to Philadelphia to try to get them back under his thumb. Helping Howard in this endeavor is Claudia Maxwell, a woman who has hated Joanna ever since they were on the same wagon train in "Savage Autumn". Claudia is insanely jealous of Joanna-who has done nothing really to earn her hatred-and helps Howard with his scheme. Before that, however, Claudia tricks Howard into marrying her.
Howard and Claudia send a bogus letter to Joanna claiming to be from a friend of hers who needs her help. Joanna goes to meet her friend, never suspecting that she is walking into a trap. Joanna is kidnapped by two trappers who Howard hired to do his dirty work; they were supposed to kidnap Tag as well, but he is away on a trip. The kidnappers beat and threaten to rape Joanna, but Windhawk eventually tracks them down and rescues her. During this rescue, the following things happen:
Windhawk kills one kidnapper; the other flees for his life.
Howard suffers a stroke, the significance of this will be revealed more in the next book in the series "Savage Spring."
Claudia tries to get her revenge on Joanna by telling Windhawk that the baby Joanna is carrying is her white lover's. This is not true, but Windhawk believes it is.
Windhawk is very angry with Joanna for leaving him again, and, like in "Savage Autumn", he treats her with great emotional cruelty. Back in the Blood Blackfoot village is another threat, a Piegan Blackfoot woman named Red Bird. Red Bird lusts after Windhawk. She tried to seduce him-Windhawk rejected her advances-but Red Bird is undaunted. She tells Joanna that Windhawk defiled her (not true) and that he is going to marry her. (Also not true.) These statements further strain an already strained relationship between Windhawk and Joanna.
More trouble follows. A pair of Cree Indians come to the village and kidnap Joanna and Windhawk's sister, Morning Star. The Cree plan to take the women back to their village, but when they find out that they have taken Windhawk's wife and sister, they abandon the women in the woods to die. Joanna and Morning Star face wolves, starvation, extreme cold, blizzards, but they survive and make it back to the village. Before they make it back, however, Windhawk comes upon three bodies, and he believes that Joanna and Morning Star are among the dead. He then leads a raid on the Cree village, killing multiple people there. The Cree vow revenge on Windhawk.
After Joanna returns to the Blackfoot village, she goes into labor. It is not until she gives birth to a son who looks like Windhawk that he realizes that she was telling the truth that he is the father of the child. Unfortunately, instead of telling and showing Joanna that he is sorry for doubting her-again-Windhawk continues to be obstinate and difficult to her. (In fairness, so is Joanna to Windhawk.) Later, Red Bird tries to kill Windhawk-she fails-and later tries to kill Joanna. Windhawk kills Red Bird before that happens.
On a slightly happier note, Morning Star and Tag are finding love with each other. Although they are teenagers, they have deep feelings of love for each other. This love is not a lifetime love, however, as Tag gets his story in the next book in the "Savage Seasons of Blackfoot" series, "Savage Spring", and the heroine in that book is not Morning Star.
Back in this book, the two Cree Indians who kidnapped Joanna and Morning Star have joined forces with another of the Blackfoot's enemies, the Assinboin tribe, to attack the Blackfoot village, which is unprotected as the men are away on a buffalo hunt, leaving Tag as the only male in the camp. Tag leads the women and children in the camp to safety, and then the Blackfoot braves show up to fight the invading horde and win, saving their loved ones.
Eventually, Joanna and Windhawk talk to each other-as opposed to at each other-and listen to the other one, finding their happiness again and having a second happily ever after.
Much of this book is Joanna and Windhawk being too proud-egotistical is more like it-to communicate with each other how they feel, and both being stubborn and inflexible about their positions. In addition, they spend too much time taking the words of others at face value without actually thinking about what is being said and who is saying it. That's a lesson we all can learn from, not to simply take anyone's statements-regardless of who they are-as the gospel truth.
The reason I liked this book less than "Savage Autumn" is because of Windhawk's behavior toward Joanna. While I certainly understand his being upset with her, and to his small credit he doesn't hit her in this book, the fact that he tries to use the fact that he can arouse her sexually to win her back as opposed to actually talking to her is kind of sleazy. It's not a terrible book, but parts could be improved.
Sex: The love scenes are good, but not terribly hot. That's typical of Constance O'Banyon books.
Violence: A lot of violence. Assaults, attempted rape, killings, none are really graphically described. But they are there.
Bottom Line: "Savage Winter" is a step down from "Savage Autumn" but if a person has one book, one needs the other.