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Distant Thunder

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The story of two women forced by circumstance into the outlaw life. For Cordy, robbing banks and trains is the only way she knows how to survive. For Meg, a life of crime is the only resort to feed her family. Then Cordy awakens strange feelings within Meg, feelings she isn't equipped to deal with.

264 pages, Paperback

First published August 1, 2003

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About the author

Peggy J. Herring

22 books21 followers
Peggy J. Herring lives on seven acres in south Texas with her cockatiel, hermit crabs, two wooden cats and several chickens. When she isn't writing Peggy enjoys traveling. She is the recipient of an Alice B. Medal and author of over a dozen romantic novels.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for MiserableFlower.
404 reviews2 followers
September 26, 2012
Overall this book was luke warm at best. The writing style at least was one that was easy to get into, though the very intial changing of point of views was very hit and miss throughout the rest of the book. Im rather annoyed that the first part of the book spent so much emphasis on how much the girls hated robbing.... and then turned around and continued the robbery themselves. -_- As far as the relationship between Maria and Leo, that seemed like sloppy seconds to me, I really did not like how those two got paired up. Actually Maria just seemed like the magical bullshit reason as to why no one in the Trask family ended up in deep doodoo. *shrugs* This was a mediocre book at best, good for a long boring trip but otherwise blah and not worth ready a second tine or worth paying full price for the book.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews