Determined to save her post-Civil War plantation, stubborn Olivia Maitland reluctantly enlists the help of ex-boxer Conor Branigan, whose bitterness over the destruction of his Irish home has made him swear to remain independent forever. Original.
From the publication of her very first historical romance, Laura Lee Guhrke has received numerous honors and critical acclaim for her novels and her writing style. She has been honored with the most prestigious award of romance fiction, the Romance Writers of America Rita Award, and she has received additional awards from Romantic Times and All About Romance. Romantic Times has proclaimed her, “One of the most natural voices in historical romance to be found today”. Her books routinely hit the USA Today Bestseller List, and Guilty Pleasures has been honored with the Romantic Times Award for Best European Historical Romance of 2004. Among her publishing credits are twelve historical romances, including her latest, And Then He Kissed Her, now available from Avon Books.
Laura is currently hard at work on her thirteenth historical romance for Avon Books. She has also written articles for various publications, including the Romance Writers Report, The British Weekly , and the Irish-American Press.
Maravilloso libro -el número 16 del #RetoRita- que recomiendo encarecidamente. Una historia aparentemente sencilla que encierra un sincero y emotivo alegato contra la opresión, ya sea por culpa de la religión, el sexo, la clase social o las convenciones establecidas. Una historia que narra de forma magistral cómo el amor, en cualquiera de sus formas, puede redimir y salvar a un personaje masculino tan complejo y endurecido como Conor, cuya desgraciada existencia en su país de origen, Irlanda, estruja el corazón del lector más insensible. Un gran aplauso para la autora y su Olivia, magnífico ejemplo de cómo la bondad puede cambiar el mundo que nos rodea.
Amo a Laura Lee Guhrke y su manera de escribir tan amena, entretenida y sobre todo por sus personajes tan entrañables.
Un Lugar para Conor es sin duda uno de sus mejores libros y yo que he leído varios libros de Laura es un tanto diferente a los demás, este libro es tierno y dulce, con ese angst que te apachurra el corazón.
La historia transcurre en Louisiana después de la guerra civil en USA. Por azares del destino Olivia que es una mujer soltera que se ha hecho cargo de tres niñas y las está criando como sus hijas se cruza en el camino de Conor un boxeador irlandés que tiene un pasado turbio y atormentado. Olivia necesita a un trabajador y sólo puede ofrecer comida un techo para dormir por lo que nadie está interesado hasta que encuentra a Conor malherid o y cree que sus súplicas han sido escuchadas ella lo acoge lo cura y lo alimenta.
Conor sólo quiere libertad y paz y sabe que no puede arraigarse a nadie por lo que en un principio rechaza la oferta de Olivia pero la ve desesperada y decide ayudarla sólo hasta la cosecha de melocotones. Pero mientras tanto va surgiendo la pasión la ternura y el amor entre Olivia y Conor y se va cociendo a fuego lento. Ella sabe que lo ama y quiere que se quede con ella y sus hijas pero no quiere retenerlo y él tiene miedo de querer y luego perderlas.
Conor es de esos protagonistas que me gustan torturados reacios a amar pero que en el fondo tiene tanto amor para dar. Olivia es de esas protagonistas que son valientes y luchan por lo que quieren y por las personas que aman. Es muy raro que suceda pero Olivia de los dos protagonistas es la que más me gustó y eso que a Conor lo amé.
Y lo que más me gustó del libro fueron las niñas y sus interacciones con Conor eran demasiado dulces sus escenas. Ellas fueron fundamentales para el cambio de él.
Siempre me hace falta un epílogo y esta no es la excepción aunque ya lo estoy aceptando ya que.
I am usually very wary and skeptical about reading "Irish" characters in novels - sometimes we are portrayed like Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman in Far and Away with dreadful Irish accents and sayings (Hollywood portrayal of the Irish like leprechauns in Darby O'Gill and the Little People - cringeworthy) and the fact that this book was only 99 cents had me between two minds whether to buy it or not - but I did and I am very glad I did. The story is very well written and like another reviewer said, I am not a big fan of flashback stories either but we had to have these in order to understand Conor. The history was very well researched and brought back to me my history lessons during my school years. Made me want to revisit the history books again and catch up on bits I had forgotten. Yes, Conor uses bad language but I think most Irish people do - I know it comes automatically to me sometimes whether I like it or not. My only gripe was that some of the Gaelic/Gaeilge was incorrect - wrong accents on letters etc. but that is only because I know the language - could have been a problem scanning the book for KINDLE or something like that - apart from that I would highly recommend this book even if you want to find about a bit of Irish history also. She had all the Irish expressions correct, even the "cup of tay" (think I will have one now actually) Must check out some more of this author's work.
“I’m not asking for tomorrow. All I’m asking for is tonight”.
After the death of her only employee and friend, Olivia desperately needs a couple of extra hands to help her on the farm or she will have to give up and sell it. But she loves the land; it's the only thing left of her family, the place her daughters call home, so she prays to God to send a man to help them.
Olivia stared down at the unconscious stranger, and she wondered if he knew how to patch a roof and pick peaches. Right now, he didn’t look capable of much at all. She sighed and pushed back her hat, glancing at the dark skies above, blinking at the rain that hit her face. “Lord,” she said heavily, “this isn’t exactly what I had in mind.” 😂
Connor knows a prizefighter needs to lose if they tell him to, but he doesn’t want to. So he wins the fight, and they beat him and leave him in the street to die. But surviving seems to be his special talent for the next time he wakes up he’s in a bed. Even if he owes Olivia his life, he can’t stay to help her and the girls. He can’t stand loving and losing another person in his life. But while he gets better, he really should do whatever is in his hand to help them, even if that makes staying a little longer, right?
Lately I've been trying to read something that it’s not by Laura Lee, but I’m so tired of dnfing books I always end up giving in. I don’t know what I love more about her books: the coherent plot, the writing style that gives me all the feelings or the heroines that are responsible and clever, but also daring when it’s needed. I’m still not thrilled about the lack of epilogue but you have to choose your wins.
I was a bit weary of picking this up because this book is older than me but the promise of cute children convinced me to give it a try-and I’m happy to say it stood the test of time. It takes place in Louisiana around 1850, which was very refreshing after reading so many regency romances. The heroine came from what used to be a very rich family before the war and now all she had left were the lands and three orphans to take care of. As for the hero, Connor, his family died during The Great Famine in Ireland, so he joined the Irish rebels and ended up in prison. Sometimes I feel his character suffered way more than his share but, taking into account the historical period, I can imagine it happening in real life.
The book goes back and forth between past and present. While my favorite part was the present, which is where the romance was taking place, the mystery of what happened to Connor and how he ended up in Louisiana creates the kind of suspense that made me unable to stop reading.
I usually hate tortured heroes because the authors tend to use their trauma to excuse their poor behavior. In Connor’s case, it was only used to explain why he didn’t want to stay in Olivia’s house-and not wanting to have a family after you have seen yours die of hunger, sickness and beatings seems pretty understable for me. Don’t get me wrong, he was a hot head at times and that got him beaten, but he wasn’t too much of a hot head. In fact, I would say the heroine was much more stubborn than he was and drove me a bit crazy sometimes. She’s lucky this was a romance novel, that’s all I’m going to say.
I was really surprised that I ended up loving Connor as much as I did. After everything he had suffered, he still had a huge heart he wasn’t able to hide, and I adored how he ended up using his wit to save the day. As for the heroine, despite being a bit naive and very stubborn, I admired her selflessness. It didn’t matter if she was in love with Connor, if she and her daughters needed him, she always let him be.
She was filled with desolation at the idea of spending all the days of her life loving him, knowing he did not love her, knowing he might even hate her for what he had been forced to do, knowing that one day she could wake up and find him gone.
Overall, Connor’s Way has a rich argument that keeps you on your toes but also the homey vibes that make you want to live in it. I would highly recommend it if you are in the mood for a single mom romance with kids you are going to adore and don’t mind a caring but tortured hero who needs to realize he cannot keep running from love forever.
This re-issue is available in ebook for a whopping $.99. I'm not going to review it, I'm gonna tell your cheap ass to just go and freaking buy it already. Spinster heroine raising three orphan girls in Reconstruction Louisiana + Irish prizefighter hero who's an epic tortured soul = WHY HAVEN'T YOU BOUGHT THE DAMN THING YET?
#RetoRita Maravilloso. Es una de esas historias en los que los protagonistas vienen de unos mundos tan diferentes, una niñez tan distinta los dos y una manera de ver las cosas tan tan diferente... El desarraigo, el pasado tan tremendo de Conor, el no querer pertenecer a nada ni a nadie, el odio que lleva dentro. Olivia, dueña de una plantación en ruinas tras la guerra civil. Una vida acomodada hasta que terminó la guerra, con tres niñas adoptadas y el coraje de sacarlas adelante y mantener su tierra que en un tiempo fue el orgullo de su familia. El pasado de Conor se va conociendo poco a poco y son partes duras, de esas que cuando las lees se te rompe el corazón. Entiendes su sentimiento de pérdida, de derrota, de negarse a querer a nadie, su odio. Ves como poco a poco se envuelve del cariño de las niñas, de la generosidad de Olivia, de su coraje, de su amor y su coraje por sacar adelante sus tierras. Es un personaje maravilloso. Olivia no se queda atrás, es de una dulzura y una generosidad tremendas. Es una historia de amor bonita,dulce y emotiva, de esas que no olvidas. Te enamoras de Conor, adoras a Olivia y amas sin remedio a las tres niñas. Para mi una maravilla.
Siempre es una buena escusa para volver a leer éste maravillo libro (aunque yo lo leo aún sin escusa). Y más gratificante es, que siempre que lo leo ( es la tercera vez que lo leo) siento cada momento igual de intensamente que la primera vez. Como digo, mis 5 estrellas son, mayoritariamente, para libros que según los termino los quiero volver a leer (y que termino por volver a leer)
Los personajes principales están maravillosamente construidos, con un hombre torturado, que ha sufrido demasiado y lo ha transformado en un cínico y ha perdido su creencia en el amor. Una mujer que lucha por salvar a su familia, que las circunstancias le hacen enfrentarse sola a muchas dificultades y lo hace con valentía y una sobriedad de carácter, que es de admirar. Aquí nos narra, cómo se puede formar una familia de la manera más extraña posible, como va creciendo la admiración, el amor y la necesidad del otro poco a poco (a fuego lento, como los buenos pucheros) y sobre todo, la redención de un hombre. Pero no una redención del exterior, sino la peor, la más difícil de todas, que te perdones a ti mismo y te permitas vivir, amar y creer que mereces que te amen.
Es un libro de momentos, miradas, caricias, que te van minando, vas apretando un puño en tu pecho, suspiras, lloras y amas a Connor, en cada momento. Porque este libro es de él de Connor. Ver como la dulzura de Liv va derribando ese "muro" emocional. Que paciencia, cuanto amor tiene esta mujer para dar. No hubiera habido otra para ayudar a Connor. Como lucha él contra lo que le pasa.
Aquí los personajes secundario, son pocos y bien puesto. Pero sobre, otra parte importante de este libro y para Connor, son las hijas de Liv. Ellas son parte muyyy importante. El pobre Connor estaba vendido con respecto a ellas.
Leerlo, porque estoy segura que no os vais arrepentir.
PD. Gracias Yolanda por darme esta oportunidad de leer un libro y poder compartir nuestra impresiones y sentimientos con otra persona. Gracias..
Conor is a traveling prizefighter with a tortured past. Olivia is a woman tending to a farm and fighting off the locals on her own, in need of a farmhand. When she finds a broken Conor in the road in Louisiana in the years post-civil war, she wonders if her prayers are answered and thinks probably not, but does the good Christian thing and takes him in.
I mean, that's kind of the set up anyway. But this book is about two people's journey to together. And it's not an easy one. There's no miraculous personality change due to realizing one or the other is in love. It's hard work. And neither lead wants to compromise on their ideas of their future.
So.
Conor clearly initially falls for the kindred spirit he sees in a 9 year old girl. So much of the book centers around family, and the culture of family, that you know the end is going to reach it's inevitable conclusion not just because he's fallen in love with the heroine, maybe more becauss he's also in love with her daughters.
Conor never stops being hard or tortured. He doesn't become a fountain of emotion. He continually shows the heroine how he cares. And it convinced him too.
I've left Olivia out of this, although she's a wonderful heroine who is uncompromising,strong, and together.
This is a really great, character-driven read with compelling leads and just enough external tension. It's straightforward, and includes a setting that is different. It's on KU, and completely worth checking out.
Conor Branigan es un boxeador que se gana la vida de esa manera, sin ningún tipo de ataduras pero por lazos del destino conocerá a la joven madre de tres niñas Olivia Maitland y de una manera inexorable tendrá que pasar algún tiempo con ellas y su modo de vida se irá desmontando. Creo que puedo afirmar que leer un libro de esta autora es una apuesta segura. La atmósfera que crea es estupenda, no solo la historia es interesante también lo son todos y cada uno de los personajes que aparecen en el libro, muy bien caracterizados y que hacen que pases volando cada una de las páginas que componen la obra. Y es que es difícil no enamorarse de esas niñas que dan también mucho juego y son importante también en esa relación que se establece entre el “duro” y distante Conor, que poco a poco va siendo conquistado no solo por Olivia y se convierte en el hombre ideal por esa dualidad entre dureza y dulzura que conquista. Olivia me ha gustado también, porque es una mujer también dulce y fuerte en las ocasiones que lo requieren, entre ellos forman una pareja que se complementa y logran darnos una historia enternecedora, dura en ocasiones pero que engancha y que conquista. Tengo que darle cinco estrellas porque me ha robado el corazón, novelas tan bien escritas y contadas merecen la pena.
¡Qué libro más bonito! Ha sido una delicia conocer a Conor y a Olivia. La historia transcurre en el estado de Luisiana, tras la guerra civil americana. Él es un boxeador irlandés que carga con un pasado durísimo a sus espaldas, y ella es una joven soltera que tiene a cargo a tres niñas adorables. Se conocerán gracias al destino, que pone a cada uno en el camino del otro. La relación entre ellos va poco a poco, se atraen muchísimo y está llena de tensión sexual y de momentos muy tiernos. A pesar de la dureza que Conor pueda transmitir con su carácter arisco, solo es un hombre muy atormentado que lo único que desea es un poco de paz en su vida. Cree que no es merecedor del amor de nadie y, qué queréis que os diga, esto se ha ganado mi corazón. Olivia es una mujer fuerte, que no se amedrenta ante nada ni ante nadie. Es la típica chica sureña, muy arraigada a su tierra, que antes de la guerra tenía todo y que ahora trabaja duramente para sobrevivir. Y bueno, el amor va fluyendo entre los dos a medida que crece nuestra alegría lectora, XD. También sufren lo suyo, eh, que no todo es "happy flower", pero merece la pena todo el dolorcito porque es un libro precioso.
This is my favorite kind of love story. It's the story of a tortured man who's lost his belief in love, a woman who's fighting to save her family, and a turbulent time in history. It is about the making a of family, the making of a couple, and the redemption of a man. It was a truly remarkable book.
Set after the Civil War, this book tells the story of a woman trying to hold onto her land from opportunistic carpetbaggers while raising 3 adopted daughters. She comes across a wounded man on the road and takes him home to nurse him back to health.
Conor Branigan is an immigrant from Ireland. He has survived watching his family starve to death, horrific torture in prison, and innumerable other atrocities. He is afraid of love and commitment, choosing traveling the circuit as a boxer in order to survive. Gradually his body begins to heal, but it's the healing of his heart that is the true magic of this book.
This book won the prestigious RITA award. It was well deserved. The writing in this book is amazing. The author uses the technique of flashbacks to help us understand Conor and his behavior. I loved the pacing and felt the author did an incredible job at switching between past and present. I usually prefer books without children, but the children in this book were absolutely necessary for the healing that Conor needed to experience. They were a delight and excellent secondary characters who added depth to the story line.
I recommend this book with no hesitation other than it's out of print, hard to find, and expensive to buy. If you can find it....it's definitely a keeper!
Que preciosidad de historia, dos personas de mundos tan distinto con objetivos completamente opuestos y que se acaban necesitando tanto. Conor me tocó el corazoncito, su dura infancia, su pasado de supervivencia y ese futuro escapando de los fantasmas...... se merecía un final así, cargado de amor y familia! Lectura muy recomendable!!!!
Una de las mejores lecturas de este reto y una gran novela. El cuidado estilo de la autora, aparentemente simple, nos engancha a sus páginas tanto como la historia que nos cuenta. Dos protagonistas inolvidables, tan humanos como bien construidos, se rodean de una serie de secundarios igualmente creíbles en los que nada falta ni sobra. Aunque el título del libro sugiere una historia centrada en el protagonista masculino, Conor, lo cierto es que los dos tienen la misma fuerza para atrapar al lector y lo consiguen, lo que no es fácil en una novela. Las conversaciones entre ellos, en las que se van descubriendo el uno al otro, son geniales y nunca vacías de contenido. Uno de los aciertos de esta novela, en mi opinión, es la estructura: incluir escenas flash-back que nos van contando el pasado de Conor desde niño para que podamos comprender su actitud, por qué está donde está y su forma de ser a medida que avanza paralelamente la historia del presente, en lugar de esperar a las típicas y extensas confesiones de los traumas casi al final del libro (y es que el chico tiene mucho que contar). Un recurso que no solo ayuda a enamorarnos de Conor y aporta interesante información sobre el conflicto entre la Irlanda católica y la Inglaterra protestante, sino que nos ahorra lo que podrían ser momentos demasiado lacrimógemos si él se lo contara a ella durante sus conversaciones, ya que su pasado es muy, muy duro. Un pasado que lo ha llevado a optar por una vida “sin ataduras, ni familia, ni compromiso” (cito a la autora). Poco a poco, a lo largo de las más de 400 páginas que enganchan sin remedio, Conor va aceptando sin quererlo esos tres lazos que se empeña en negarse a sí mismo y que implican directamente al corazón y a los sentimientos. Curiosamente, no es la protagonista femenina, Olivia, la primera en tocar el corazón de Conor, sino una de las hijas adoptivas de ella. Un detalle que me encanta y que considero también muy acertado. Él se convierte en un héroe para las niñas antes de que Olivia lo vea como tal. Aprovecho para destacar esos 3 personajes de 14, 9 y 6 años, que dan el toque de humor a una historia dura y complicada, la suavizan con su dulce ingenuidad y contribuyen a su avance con su infantil sinceridad en algunos momentos. Tres niñas que se comportan y hablan como corresponde a su edad, algo que no siempre sucede en las novelas. “Un lugar para Conor” es un canto a la supervivencia, a la fortaleza interior del ser humano. Nos habla sobre todo de orgullo y altruismo, pero también de egoísmo (¿quién no lo es, en realidad?): exacerbado en el antagonista y moderado en la protagonista femenina, que hace todo lo posible para que Conor se quede en la casa con ella y así, poder conservarla y no tener que venderla. Ese es el conflicto principal, el que hace arrancar la historia, y a él se unen el personal de cada uno de los protagonistas y el de pareja, que deriva de los anteriores. Es un entramado perfecto y complejo que la autora consigue que parezca simple por la forma de contarlo y logra encontrar el punto de unión entre lo que se nos presenta como opuesto. Ella, cristiana devota, frente a él, católico excomulgado que ha perdido la fe; ella, aferrada a su hogar, a su tierra y a su familia frente a él, que ya no tiene nada de eso ni quiere tenerlo; una mujer bondadosa ante un hombre lleno de odio y amargura que se siente un traidor a su patria y a los que un día fueron su gente. Olivia también tiene dramas en su pasado (no tan graves como los de Conor, es cierto), pero los ha superado y sigue luchando día a día y enfrentándose con valentía y fe a los golpes que le da la vida. La lucha de Conor es literal: boxea para mantener el odio bajo control liberándolo en el ring. La fortaleza de Olivia, unida a su bondad, a su amor y al cariño de esas tres niñas que adoptan a Conor como su héroe serán las que de verdad consigan arrinconar ese odio y dejar espacio a la esperanza de futuro en el corazón de un hombre que se limita a sobrevivir en el presente. Una novela que recomiendo a cualquier lector y que considero imprescindible para las adictas a la romántica.
I have a rough top 10 all time favourite books in my head. While I don’t think have really slipped under that, I do have quite a few ties over the years. Ever since I first read Conor’s Way it’s had a spot on that list, if not in the top 5. The book started haunting me to read it again a few weeks ago and when a book starts doing that I’ve no choice but to give in. I was rather surprised to see it’s been almost five years since I read it. I finished it last night and knew that it still is that high. This was, is and always will be a 5+ book for me. It’s not an easy read but it’s it’s so worth it in its richness. It’s currently on KU so anyone who is even the slightest bit curious needs to read it. It will break your heart and then heal it.
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While I’ve read this book a number of times and recommend it every chance I get, it seems I haven’t posted a review on GoodReads, something I must remedy immediately. Giving a very short one, I love everything about this book and is one of the first books I looked for when I switched from print books to ebooks.
While I got it for a Very Good Price back in the day, at $5 it’s still a very good deal. Connor Branigan is probably one of the most tortured hero’s I’ve ever read. It hurts reading everything he has been through in his relatively young life. Of course that makes his HEA even sweeter when he finally gets it. But until then? Wow does he suffer. He grew up in Ireland, the poor tenants of a very nasty English Lord. He and his family were thrown off their land and that was only the beginning. His family starved to death during the Potato Famine.
He later joins the early version of the IRA in retaliation against the English. He was captured and unspeakably tortured into giving up his comrades. Despite holding out against the most horrific treatment imaginable, he finally gives in, only to be told by the sadistic torturer that another member had already given the information, his friends all killed and his torture was not even necessary..
He immigrates to America and things aren’t much better. There is a hatred in the country for all Irish immigrants and he’s finally reduced to trying to make a living as a prizefighter. But when he disobeys orders to ‘throw’ a fight, he’s beaten and then ends up under the roof of Olivia Maitland and her adopted daughters. The book takes place sometime after the civil way and Olivia is struggling. She is being hounded to sell her farm by a former rejected overseer. So when she notices a badly beaten man on her way home, she thinks maybe God is answering her prayers and once she helps him heal, he will help her with chores around her farm leading up to the harvest of her peach crop. But once he regains conscious, it turns out he’s her worst nightmare. He swears, he drinks, he smokes and he’s a bitter and resentful man.
But she slowly gets to know the man underneath his mask of hostility and she begins to fall in love. Connor has never known real kindness in his life and he is befuddled by it and resists falling in love with Oliva and her daughters with all of his might. But that proves impossible so he finally embraces his new role and as he does, he lets go of his self-loathing and finally reaches out for happiness.
This book is such a great example of the romance genre and why I love it so much. It’s beautifully written and we weep and celebrate with Connor and Olivia. They are both such lonely people yet so deserving of being loved. As I said, I’ve read this numerous times over the years, first in print and then on my ereader and every single time I do, I fall in love with it all over again. This book is easily in my top ten of every romance book I’ve read and if you haven’t read it yourself, you simply must give it a read.
Una delicia de libro Una historia de amor rodeada de dolor y miedo que nos da esperanzas y que nos transmite el mensaje de que hasta el corazón más dañado puede volver a latir. Ya sabéis que siento especial debilidad por las historias situadas en el Oeste y tras la Guerra de Secesión Americana y, si bien Laura Lee no es capaz de retorcerte el corazón como mi adorada Lorraine Heath, sí logra componer una historia sencilla pero de intensidad emocional, de tenerte con la lagrimilla al borde de la pestaña postiza gran parte de la lectura. Los protagonistas son adorables y sufres con ellos (también disfutas pero momentos de esta clase hay muchos menos) y la historia está contada de un modo muy sencillo y efectivo. El final es un poco simplón, eso sí, y se resuelve todo más rápidamente de lo que a mí hubiera gustado pero eso no me quita el disfrute previo ni la sensación de haber tenido entre mis manos un libro que merece mucho la pena.
Una historia preciosa. Conor es un amor. Olivia es un amor. Becky, Carrie y Miranda son un amor. Hasta Chester es un amor. Solo tengo un pero: me ha faltado un epílogo.
Esta autora fue un descubrimiento hace poco con su serie "Las chicas de Little Russel" y unas amigas me recomendaron este libro diciendo que era de lo mejorcito de ella...Y no se equivocaron!! A pesar de que mis expectativas eran muy altas, no decayeron según iba leyendo sino todo lo contrario.
La historia romántica ha sido tranquila, pausada y muy a fuego lento, lo cual agradezco, porque después de tantos insta - love, hay veces que me apetece creerme ese romance un poco más. Conor es un personaje muy complejo, su historia ha sido tan dura que es la base de todo el libro y me ha gustado mucho ver ese pasado que ha hecho que sea como es ahora y por qué hace lo que hace cuando encuentra a la protagonista. Sobre Olivia, solo puedo decir que es una protagonista de las que me gustan; fuerte, independiente pero que no tiene miedo a admitir sus debilidades cuando es necesario, que se deja aconsejar. Sus hijas, otros personajes clave en la historia, a diferencia de otros niños de libros que he leído, me han parecido eso, niñas normales que solo buscan tener una familia y van a hacer todo lo posible porque eso ocurra.
Hay pocos secundarios, pero todos y cada uno de ellos cumplen su papel y no parecen estar metidos con calzador. Si algún pero tengo que poner, es que el antagonista acaba demasiado bien para todo lo que hizo sufrir a Conor y Olivia. En definitiva, un libro que habla del dolor de un hombre que tuvo que alejarse de todo lo que amaba por la guerra y de la importancia de las segundas oportunidades y el amor para curar viejas heridas.
He llegit aquest llibre motivada pel #RetoRita3 #RetoLaura. És el primer que llegeixo de l'autora. No està mal. El personatge masculí és força complex, torturadet, com a mi m'agraden (als llibres, eh...). Ella, i la història, una mica previsible. No hi ha gaire sorpreses, però la lectura és fàcil i amena. Me'l vaig acabar en dues tardes. Molt romàntic, i amb aquests toquets d'Irlanda i de gaèlic, que ens arriben al cor...
He leído este libro motivada por el #RetoRita3 #RetoLaura. Es el primero que leo de esta autora. No está mal. El personaje masculino es bastante complejo, torturadito, como a mí me gustan (en los libros, eh..). Ella, y la historia, un poco previsibles. No hay muchas sorpresas, pero la lectura es fácil y amena. Me lo terminé en dos tardes. Muy romántico, y con esos toquecillos de Irlanda y de gaélico, que nos llegan al corazón...
Estoy in love con Conor, me ha gustado mucho. Yo que esperaba un nadismo. Pero no. Al principio ya me estaba montando la película "El seductor" (1971) o "La seducción" (2017), si es que soy una malpensada. Conor, este maromazo irlandés arrastra un pasado digno de la Gabaldon, es imposible que no te enamores de él (ʃƪ♡₃♡). Olivia, es una mujer echá pa'lante después de los estragos que dejó la Guerra de Secesión, pero necesita que le recojan los melocotones (literal, viciosillas, y no tan literal ( ͡~ ͜ʖ ͡°)) y se lo pide al cielo y nuestro maromazo cae de él. Entre ellos surge un amor a fuego lento con un final redondo como dice Cassie. Altamente recomendable
Es esa historia de amor por lo que siento debilidad, una trama aparentemente sencilla pero que tiene más miga de lo que parece en un principio, dos personajes que vienen de mundos completamente opuestos y con una gran mochila acuesta, en el caso del protagonista. Todo ello con el trasfondo de fin de la guerra de Secesión en un Sur derrotado con los nuevos ricos yanquis haciéndose con el poder de todo. Y por otro lado la lucha de Irlanda contra la opresión inglesa. Esa parte me ha encantado, tengo debilidad por ese país y todo lo que le rodea, pozi no lo niego.
El escenario, una casa sureña ruinosa con una protagonista solterona (WOW con 29 y ya estabas para vestir santos), 3 niñas adoptadas y un boxeador. Conor es malhumorado, cinico, torturado y de vuelta de todo, que es recogido con Olivia en un estado lamentable despues de una paliza, un cocktel perfecto para una historia de amor que se va cociendo poco a poco. Vamos conociendo a Conor y lo que le paso a través de flash-back que nos ayudan a conocerlo mejor, un personaje muy complejo y muy bien construido, y Olivia no se queda atrás, ella también perdió mucho pero tienes a sus hijas con ella y eso hace que no se sienta sola y sea más valiente con sus sentimientos. Y las 3 niñas dan el contrapunto a la historia sin ser empalagosas.
Eche de menos un epílogo y un poco más de “saseo”, pero no siempre se puede tener todo
#RetoRita 4/5 Un libro que merece mucho la pena. Una bonita historia de amor llena de esperanza, que nos toca el corazón. Tanto Conor como Olivia me parecen unos personajes muy bien construidos, tan diferentes pero tan parecidos a la vez. A las niñas las terminas amando. Me ha gustado mucho, ya era hora en un libro del #RetoRita Totalmente recomendable
Often prohibitively expensive to purchase from any of the usual online used book sources, Conor's Way is an early effort by Laura Lee Guhrke (her 3rd book) that stands head & shoulders above the rest. This book is a western/frontier historical reminiscent of a good Maggie Osborne story (The Wives of Bowie Stone).
Olivia Maitland is a woman struggling to care for her adopted daughters in the aftermath of the Civil War. Her hired man has recently passed away, and she is in desperate need of a helping hand with the overwhelming responsibilities of caring for her family and her nearly bankrupt & dilapidated plantation. She prays for help and soon finds it in the form of one Conor Branigan, a prizefighter & aimless drifter, who Olivia finds beaten and unconscious on the side of the road. Olivia drags Conor home and tends to his injuries, but quickly discovers that he's not the sort of man she feels comfortable with having under her roof. He's prone to swearing, has violent nightmares, and when Olivia discovers that he's a prizefighter and a gambler, it's the final straw. Being a Christian do-gooder, however, Olivia is reluctant to toss Conor out on his ear before his injuries are fully healed, and thus the stage is set for a sweet and touching cabin romance that has earned a well-deserved spot on my keeper shelf. Conor is a very tortured hero with an intriguing past, and Olivia a reluctant spinster (her father's possessiveness following the death of Olivia's mother being the root cause of her spinsterhood), who packed away her dreams of love & marriage along with her party dresses, following the war and the brutal hardships of life. They are strongly attracted to each other for reasons that seem to baffle them both, but Olivia is afraid to ask Conor to stay, and Conor is blatantly terrified of becoming attached to anyone or allowing himself to even want a wife & family.
Without revealing too much of the plot, suffice it to say that Conor has some of the most valid reasons I've ever seen in a romance to fear commitment, so his persistent avoidance of anything resembling settling down came across in a very genuine way. Olivia wants Conor but is unwilling to press the issue, but when they are caught in a compromising position by self-righteous and nosy townspeople, Conor reluctantly agrees to marry Olivia, rather than walk away knowing that she faces losing custody of her adopted daughters. This comes across as just a tad contrived but is still credible enough to keep a reader engaged. Olivia feels terrible about it, but she's willing to do literally anything to keep her children, and while Conor is initially angry, he doesn't go to unforgivable extremes in his resentment over being trapped into marriage. And as Olivia's friend Sarah so aptly phrases it: "If a man can't afford to pay for the dinner, he shouldn't even be looking at the menu." - which neatly sums up Conor's predicament. In short, Conor may be a reluctant hero (& husband) but he's a standout at delivering when it really counts.
I gave Conor's Way an A+ and highly recommend it... if you're among the fortunate few who can manage to lay hands on a copy. I'm keeping mine - forever and I will definitely read it again.
CONOR'S WAY is like a chocolate caramel candy bar. It is rich, gooey and messy at times. And like good chocolate, it can be addictive.
Set in Louisiana six years after the Civil War, it is a story that is steeped in history. Conor Branigan moved to America from Ireland trying to forget a tragic past. Olivia Maitland survived the war between the states but lost two brothers at Gettysburg. Her father died a short time later after he had an accident. She eventually became mother to three orphaned daughters of her closest friend when she passed away. The Civil War took a deep toll and her home is all the memories she has left of her family.
They meet each other for the first time when Conor is beaten and left for dead after a skirmish with a devious business owner. Olivia was heading to town to see if anyone had replied to her ad for a worker to assist her with her property. She spots Conor and takes him home to care for him. All along hoping he might be someone that will help her.
Both people came from damaged backgrounds but it is what they have learned from their pasts that formed their personalities. Conor had been content with his superficial life. Or so he thought. Olivia worried deeply on how she was going to put food on the table and pay the bills until the peaches could be harvested. That same business owner that hurt Conor wants to buy Olivia's land so he can build a railroad; it is the only piece of property he needs for his plans to go forth. And he will do anything to get it.
Over the next few weeks, Olivia and her daughters become attached to Conor. Each in their own way. Conor does his darnedest in giving Olivia a hard time. And those same secondary characters give depth and flavor to the storyline without overwhelming the time spent between the hero and heroine.
Full of trust issues and emotion with dark moments, this historical romance is for the reader who enjoys imperfect characters and plenty of angst. The plot will push and pull at your soul. If anything else, you will never take for granted what war does to a person. I finished the book within two days but I am exhausted. In a good way.
Libro perfecto si buscas un romance con una buena historia y de fácil lectura. He tardado 10 días en leerlo, pero sé que si hubiese tenido un poquito más de tiempo libre, no habría tardado ni la mitad. Cuando una novela te mantiene en vilo aunque te caigas de sueño, es buena señal ;)
Okay okay okay. Suspiciously green 90’s book cover aside, Conor’s Way is not a book to be missed. Trust me, you need this book in your life. This novel takes on everything I love about the romance genre, and Laura Lee Guhrke executes everything to perfection. This, right here, is why I read romance novels and why I love them so damn much.
So let’s lay the scene. In the postbellum south, Olivia Maitland is struggling to keep up her ancestral plantation and raise her three adoptive daughters. She was raised in privilege and comfort, but now she’s struggling just to keep food on the table and mostly-leaky roof over her family’s heads. What would really be helpful would be a farmhand, so she prays that God sends her a man. Then she finds a beaten and half-dead man in the middle of the road. So she brings him home.
Enter Conor, a tough Irish prizefighter who’s also got a certified Epically Tragic Backstory and is a Tortured Soul. The Potato Famine wiped out his whole family; he watched his brother beaten to death with sticks and mother die in a ditch and his sisters starve in his arms. He joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood, and became a hero, but eventually the English caught him and imprisoned him. Now he’s in America fighting and drinking through his PTSD. He doesn’t want a home, and he knows he doesn’t deserve love.
Buuuuut Conor wasn’t counting on prim and proper Olivia and her kind heart and her three attention-starved daughters. Or a grouchy sheepdog.
Romance novels with cute kids are the best and anyone who says differently can fight me. And Conor’s Way features not one but three cute kids. Imagine a scarred and foul-mouthed prizefighter snuggled up with a little girl who’s scared of thunderstorms and wants to hear a bedtime story. Imagine a tomboy finally finding a father to build her a treehouse and take her fishing. Imagine a proven womanizer suddenly finding a protective streak as he watches a teenager dance “too closely” with a fresh, pimply-faced boy. It’s fucking adorable. My heart. Cannot.
And then Conor and Olivia together? They are fire. Olivia’s 29 and, due to family circumstance, never got a chance to be appreciated as a woman. It’s like that never-been-kissed, doesn’t know how beautiful she is trope, but better, because Olivia is also a supremely strong, self-sufficient, determined woman. She loves Conor, but she isn’t going to do what he says or bend her principles for him. Even if he’s super good in bed and makes her feel things she didn’t know she could feel.
Additionally, Guhrke handles Conor’s PTSD very well. Of course, nobody knows that’s what it is in the 19th century, but yeah. The book doesn’t pretend that True Love heals mental wounds or that you can just “get over” being tortured and systematically degraded all your life. Rather, this novel sees Conor come to a realization and acceptance of his past, and a choice to allow himself happiness in spite of it all. So beautiful.
So, basically: Conor’s Way is a emotional, genuine, and wonderful romance between a take-no-bullshit single mother and the tortured soul she invites into her home. Add a dash of greedy carpetbaggers and gossipy old spinsters, and you’ve got the recipe for a A+ historical romance. This book is not to be missed. For real. Don’t let the suspicious cover mislead you.