Life in Sweetwater is the American Dream. People who work hard can make a living and sometimes a fortune. Friends look out for one another. Bad guys eventually get their comeuppance.
Virginia ‘Jenny’ Gray is teaching in Baltimore when she learns that her young sisters in Allentown PA are being badly mistreated by her older half-sister and her fanatically religious husband. Jenny hurries to her sister’s to see what is happening; the girls are being treated even worse than she expected. Jenny’s concerns are rejected, and she is thrown out of the house. Her only option is to take her sisters and run.
Jenny takes a teaching position in the non-extradition Wyoming Territory. A rancher’s will establishes a school for Shoshoni children on an adjacent reservation. The position provides a house for the teacher. If the teacher is unable to start the school, the property (thousands of acres of excellent grazing land) will be auctioned off, probably at a pittance. There are handsome twin brothers, brave and beautiful young women, a hot-ticket 9-year-old (so astute and mature she is accused of being a 30 year-old-midget), a sleazy reverend, another inheritance requiring a grandson, forced marriage, murder, an assassin, and bad guys trying to scare Jenny and her family away.
The characters courageous and likeable (the nice ones anyway). The bad guys are suitably evil. The rancher’s half Shoshoni son is a poignant and intelligent character. After reading a couple of very dark stories, this is a refreshing, upbeat romance. Recommended.
Readalikes:
Carolyn Brown – Willow; Leigh Greenwood –Pete, part of The Cowboys series; Jill Marie Landis – Summer Moon; Kathleen Eagle – The Last Good Man; Ana Leigh – The MacKenzies: Luke; Mona Gansberg Hodgson – Prairie Song.
Pace: fast
Characters: likeable, well developed; enjoyable secondary characters
Story: plot-driven
Language: engaging
Tone: upbeat, suspenseful, slightly sensual
Frame: 1884; Sweetwater, Wyoming Territory