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Doc Wyoming

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Librarian Note: This edition's ISBN is in conflict with another's in the database - Leopard in the Snow.

Dixie Sheldon, M.D.
Bright, compassionate, eager to begin her medical career. And the folk in Seaside, Wyoming, are happy to have her as their family doctor. All except one...

Sheriff Hal Blane
Was he afraid that if she treated his mother, Dixie'd be privy to his darkest secrets?

256 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published November 1, 1993

10 people want to read

About the author

Sharon Brondos

37 books7 followers
Sharon Brondos began reading mystery/crime/thriller novels about half a century ago when Ellery Queen Rex Stout and Earl Stanley Gardner were in vogue for US readers.

Her "mystery mentor her mother, Elaine, was a dedicated mystery buff, taking as many books from the local library as possible each week and making a tiny mark on the corner of a back page so she would know not to re-checkout that book.

During the following fifty years, Sharon has published two dozen commercial novels, a double handful of short stories, non-fiction articles and poems.

She lives with husband and cats in Wyoming. Three adult children and a growing number of grandchildren are in various locales around the country.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
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205 reviews2 followers
December 26, 2023
This Harlequin Super Romance is more of the MYSTERY genre than a contemporary romance. In the last half of the novel, there were a few minor characters "thrown in" to the line-up, and AFTER I finished the book, I discovered "Doc Wyoming" is Book 2 of the author's WOMEN WHO DARE two-book series. "The Marriage Ticket" is Book 1. Apparently the minor characters in the last half of "Doc Wyoming" were the major characters in "The Marriage Ticket". Some black crows had an underlying thread in this book -- I found it humorously ironic that during my read of the book, my hubby pointed to a big black crow sitting on a limb watching us as we pulled out of the driveway. He had no idea that I immediately thought about this book and its black crows!
Also, in Chapter 11, the old wise medicine woman tells Dixie, "burn the dross and leave the pure gold" -- unique expression, never heard that before.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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