It's been a long time since I've read one of Linda Lael Miller's books, and it's clear here why she's had such a long career. This is a sweet historical, set in 1910 though it could as easily be earlier. It reminded me of Christian historical romances, many of which are set in the late 19th century frontier while that setting largely fell out of vogue in mainstream romance back in the late 1990s. Though, of course, this being mainstream, it has no faith content and there are the obligatory explicit love scenes.
I quote enjoyed this for the first few chapters, Miller is a gifted author. But as the story progressed, the short format started to make the plot feel to rushed. We meet our heroine when she's in dire circumstances, having lost her position as teacher when the Indian school shut down, she has just learned her brother won't send her any money. Now she is stranded with nowhere to live, no friends to help her, no money, and four students in her care. As luck would have it, she meets our hero, a hardworking and successful rancher.
I think if the timeline was less compressed, the rest of the plot would have been more believable. But as it is, they marry, have sex, and fall in love in less than a week. (Sorry, is that a spoiler? It is a romance novel.) I think the issue is more that there was enough material here for a full-length book, but I think the publisher, Harlequin, has pretty strict word counts. So the subplots and backstories are never fully fleshed out, and the circumstances that force the heroine to marry quickly feel a bit too contrived, and it's hard to buy into them falling in love as quickly as they do.
Still, it was an enjoyable read. It's part of a series, and I've not read the other book, though I understand this is a prequel (and I suspect Gracie, the hero's young daughter, must be a major character in the other books, as she's one of the strongest characters in this book.) I wonder if some of the references to backstory that I found hard to follow are covered in the other books. But apart from that, this book stood well on it's own.