Showing posts with label cowboys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cowboys. Show all posts

Monday, June 15, 2020

A Cowboy to Remember

A Cowboy to Remember by Rebekah Weatherspoon, 357 pages

Celebrity chef Evie Buchanan seems to have it made, with a reality show competition win under her belt and a highly rated morning TV show on the air. But when she takes a tumble down the stairs at an industry event, Evie ends up in the hospital with her memory completely missing. Though her friends and agent are supportive, they can't take on her care full time, which is how Evie ends up convalescing at a luxury dude ranch in California--the same dude ranch where she grew up and has some close family friends, though she still can't remember them. Hunky cowboy Zach is one of those she can't remember, though that may be for the best, as she and Zach apparently had a decade-long grudge that has been wiped out with Evie's memory.

I can't say I'm a big fan of amnesia stories, but I do enjoy seeing diversity in mainstream romance, and this book definitely hits that mark perfectly. Yes, these are wealthy people in wealthy circumstances, but the realities of Black life are still in this otherwise-unbelievable story. (And it's still a steamy, emotional romance to boot!)

Friday, December 27, 2019

Aloha Rodeo

Aloha Rodeo: Three Hawaiian cowboys, the world's greatest rodeo, and a hidden history of the American West / David Wolman and Julian Smith, 250 pgs.

Cowboys and the American West.  Of course, Hawaii is a late comer as far as states but the natives had been dealing with cattle for years.  In 1908, three unknown (to the crowds) Hawaiians showed up to the greatest rodeo in the world and walked off with many prizes.  The story here gives a lot of history about cowboys in the American West and cowboys in Hawaii.  I was fascinated by this account...a little slice of history that few are aware existed.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

The Tin Star / J.L. Langley

The Tin Star by J.L. Langley. 290 p.

Ethan's best friend John comes over to Ethan's ranch, The Tin Star, with news that Jamie, John's little brother, has been kicked off their father's ranch because he told his father he was gay. Ethan, who's gay but not out except to his close friends (like John), thinks Jamie was foolish to come out because life will be tough in ranch country and their small Texas town for an openly gay cowboy. He offers Jamie a job at the Tin Star. Once Jamie arrives, Ethan realizes that he's very attracted to Jamie, and they start up a romance. In between sex scenes they try to figure out who's harassing them, damaging property and eventually shooting Ethan.

This is pretty much pure fluff--not that there's anything wrong with that. I had a terrible time taking the dialogue seriously; I don't have the book here to quote from, but there's lots of "boy howdy" cowboy-isms sprinkled throughout. Then again, I've never met a cowboy in person; it's possible that the speech patterns are accurate, and they just sound like a goofy cliche to me because of my ignorance. I was a bit more thrown by the plot; at the beginning of the book Ethan strongly believes that coming out in his situation would just be foolish and make managing his ranch more difficult, so I would expect it to be a bigger deal when he decides to do it later in the book. Yet it reads almost like an afterthought. Similarly, the harassment that Jamie and Ethan undergo didn't really seem menacing; it was just plot to fill the space between love scenes. I didn't expect serious realism or anything, but the tone seemed a little too facile to suit me.

Overall, my dabbling in the male/male romance arena wasn't terribly successful--the first (Lovers' Knot) didn't have enough romance and the second (PsyCop: Partners) didn't have enough detail about the plot or the romance. This one was closest to what I'd consider a good romance in the erotica category, but it was a bit too goofy for me. Then again, if I picked three random titles off a list of ten het romances, I'm not sure I'd have any better odds of finding on that I really liked.