Wild
Cowboy Country
by Erin Marsh
Publication Date: 7/28/2020
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Who has more right to the
land?
Park ranger Lacey Montgomery
and rancher Clay Stevens are on opposite sides of a thorny issue. Lacey has
spent her career reintroducing wolves to Rocky Ridge National Park and now
oversees the welfare of the pack. Clay has struggled for years to make a success
of the historic ranch he inherited and is tired of losing his calves to
predators.
When Clay’s teenage nephew
and his friends carelessly endanger a wild wolf and her pups, Clay and Lacey’s
lives collide. They shouldn’t be so attracted to each other—she’s a hometown
girl beloved in the community, while he’s still regarded as a city-slicker
interloper. But Clay’s piercing blue eyes make Lacey’s pulse race, and her
sweet face and kissable lips are drawing him under her spell, much as he tries
to resist…
Opposites attract, but the
terrain between them is awfully rough…
MY REVIEW:
Wild Cowboy Country by Erin Marsh
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Clay Stevens wants to reclaim his Grandfather's land using the latest technology to bring in water. His ranch manager keeps putting up roadblocks and fighting him on everything. The only problem Clay has is the wolves bothering his cattle.
Lacey is a conservation officer and out to keep the wolves protected. She believes the ranchers and wolves can coexist.
Then Clay's nephew and friends cause a landslide that dangers a wolf and her pups which puts Lacey's life in danger.
The town already hates Clay and his family because of what his dad did to the town and he needs to prove he is not his dad. Including convincing Lacey's family. Lacey agrees that he is not his father and her family is not happy when they start spending time together.
I gave this a 5 star review because this book was so different than others. Lacey also helps out at a zoo where they take in injured animals and keep them there for breeding and the public to learn about animals. But the funny part is you are sometimes in the minds of these animals and what they are thinking. I laughed out loud several times.
Thank you to NetGalley and Harlequin for letting me review this book.
View all my reviews
Wild Cowboy Country by Erin Marsh
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Clay Stevens wants to reclaim his Grandfather's land using the latest technology to bring in water. His ranch manager keeps putting up roadblocks and fighting him on everything. The only problem Clay has is the wolves bothering his cattle.
Lacey is a conservation officer and out to keep the wolves protected. She believes the ranchers and wolves can coexist.
Then Clay's nephew and friends cause a landslide that dangers a wolf and her pups which puts Lacey's life in danger.
The town already hates Clay and his family because of what his dad did to the town and he needs to prove he is not his dad. Including convincing Lacey's family. Lacey agrees that he is not his father and her family is not happy when they start spending time together.
I gave this a 5 star review because this book was so different than others. Lacey also helps out at a zoo where they take in injured animals and keep them there for breeding and the public to learn about animals. But the funny part is you are sometimes in the minds of these animals and what they are thinking. I laughed out loud several times.
Thank you to NetGalley and Harlequin for letting me review this book.
View all my reviews
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Excerpt:
Wiping his hands on a towel, Clay turned to her, his smile both
hesitant and undeniably charming. “I’d offer an after-dinner walk along the
river, but…”
The words hung uncompleted, neither wanting to finish the sentence
and admit to the difficulties surrounding their new relationship. Instead,
Lacey reached for Clay’s hand, wrapping her fingers around his. “I don’t need
moonlit strolls.”
His blue eyes softened into warm pools as he lifted their
intertwined hands and kissed the back of her knuckles. He released her fingers,
only to gently cup her face instead. “I’d still like to take you on them
though.”
A burst of joy ricocheted through Lacey, settling in her heart. She
ran her fingers through his hair, and his expression turned so intense that she
swore she felt a tug deep in her soul.
“Then why don’t you tell me about it.” She paused a beat before
adding, “In your bedroom.”
He kissed her, his lips hot and demanding. She met his hunger with
her own. His hands slipped from her face, skimming lightly down her sides until
they settled at her waist. He pulled her close, and her body, already liquid
from the warm heat spreading through her, molded against his. The kiss
deepened. The more they indulged, the more they craved.
Clay lifted his lips from hers. They stood under the overhead
kitchen light, each breathing hard. This time, it was Clay who extended his
hand. Lacey immediately took it and allowed him to lead her.
“First, we’d walk through the scrub to get to the river,” Clay said,
his voice low and soft. It seemed to have a current all its own, both peaceful
and raging at the same time. “We’d hold hands just like this, and I’d rub my
thumb over your skin.”
A shiver ran through Lacey at the gentle brush of flesh against
flesh. “I like this stroll.”
He laughed, the sound a deep, rolling rumble. “So do I.”
They reached the first landing, and he paused by a window. Moonlight
bathed them, and his blond hair almost appeared silver. He drew her close, his
lips mere inches from hers. She could feel the puff of his breath, but he
didn’t dip his head. Instead, he spoke in a husky whisper, this time using the
present tense instead of what-ifs. “The water is below us now. It’s like a
glowing ribbon cutting through the land.”
“I can hear it,” Lacey said. “A rushing babble breaking the night’s
stillness.”
Clay’s mouth pressed against hers. A butterfly kiss. Then another.
The next one landed on the corner of her mouth as he slowly worked his way
across her cheek and jaw. When he reached her ear, he told her quietly, “We
stop for a bit, enchanted by the beauty. But we don’t stay. We head for the
grove of cottonwoods. Normally, we’d hear Steller’s jays scolding us, but
they’re asleep at this hour.”
Clay stepped back and led her up the steps and down a hallway. They
moved swiftly now, their breathing labored as if they’d actually taken a long
hike. He paused at the end of the corridor. When he pushed open the door, Lacey
said, “We startle a mountain cottontail.”
Clay chuckled. “I can just make out a faint rustle as he hops away.”
They entered his bedroom. He’d pulled the curtain nearly shut, but
he’d left a big enough gap to allow bright moonlight to seep into the room.
They walked inside, still hand in hand. The old wooden floorboards creaked
beneath their feet.
“There’s the splash of an otter fishing in the creek,” Lacey said.
Clay stopped at the foot of the bed. “I lay out one of the old
family quilts for us.”
This time, their narration wasn’t completely make-believe. A
coverlet with a log-cabin design adorned the massive, mission-style bed. The
room itself was bigger than most bedrooms for the time period of the house, but
it had been designed after an English manor. It made for a cavernous space.
Aside from a rope rug and basic furniture, Clay hadn’t done much decorating.
Nothing hung on the walls, except for a single, unembellished mirror and a
couple of photos of the ranch, which she assumed he’d taken. The emptiness
momentarily sucked away some of Lacey’s joy, but she hid it. Clay hadn’t
brought her into his private space for sympathy, and offering any would do more
harm than good.
Instead, she wrapped her arms around him and kissed him long and
deep. He groaned against her mouth, the sound guttural. He picked her up, and
she wrapped her legs around his torso. Without breaking their embrace, he
carried her over to the bed. They tumbled onto the mattress, their lips locked,
their limbs tangled. A desperate, urgent edge now drove their lovemaking.
Lacey’s blood thundered through her like a galloping mustang, wild and
unfettered. She reached for Clay’s Western shirt, her fingers fumbling at the
buttons. His mouth moved from hers, trailing across her chin and then down her
throat. When he hit a sensitive spot, she gasped. He paused, applying a gentle
suction before his tongue darted out. Intense pleasure shot through her. She
arched, yanking on the button still between her fingers. It ripped loose, and
she felt his lips curve against her flesh.
“Why, Miss Montgomery, are you tearing off my clothes?”
“I’ll sew it back on,” she promised.
“I have more shirts. Feel free to continue. I want your hands on me.
All of me.”
A landslide of need collided in her. Without taking time to think,
Lacey bunched the fabric in both hands and pulled sharply. The buttons flew off
with satisfying pops.
Clay lifted his head to stare down at her. The moonlight glinted off
the golden strands in his arched brow. “You are surprisingly good at that.”
She smiled and ran her fingers over his defined pecs. “Beginner’s
luck and plenty of motivation. I’ve been wanting to touch you for weeks.”
Clay responded with a long, hard kiss. “You’re making it very hard
to take it slow.”
“Sorry,” she said with a surprising giggle. Even as a teenager,
she’d rarely tittered. If she was going to laugh, it was going to be a full
one. But now. In this moment. The lighthearted sound seemed right, a delightful
echo of the buoyancy Clay made her feel.
His fingers grazed the bottom of her T-shirt. “May I?”
She nodded. “I’ve been fantasizing about that too.”
He chuckled, the sound a little raw. “Not nearly as much as I have.”
***
Excerpted from Wild Cowboy Country by Erin Marsh. © 2020 by Erin Marsh. Used with
permission of the publisher, Sourcebooks
Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. All rights reserved.
Two-time Golden Heart® Finalist Erin Marsh credits her childhood family road trips in her grandparents’ Grand Marquis with opening her imagination and exposing her to the wonders of the United States. The lessons she learned then still impact her writing today. She lives with her husband and daughter near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Author Website: https://laurelkerr.com/
This sounds like a great read! Thank you for the review
ReplyDeleteThis sounds amazing! I absolutely love cowboy romances :) Great review!
ReplyDeleteneed to get to reading cowboy romances again.. so many added to my tbr now :)
ReplyDeleteGreat review, glad you enjoyed it. Unfortunately, I'm not a cowboy story fan.
ReplyDelete