After her husband is murdered and her daughter disappears, Lavinia Price ventures alone into the Florida Everglades, where she is rescued by Seminole chieftain Wolf Dancer, a passionate and gentle warrior who has a special gift.
Edwards began writing romances in 1982 and released her 100th novel, Savage Skies, on August 28, 2007. Although her earlier books were classic historical romances, the vast majority of her novels involve Native American tribes. Edwards's grandmother was a full-blooded Cheyenne. Her first 99 books sold a combined 10 million copies as of August 2007, with her more recent novels averaging sales of 250,000–350,000 copies.
Edwards has won the Romantic Times Lifetime Achievement Award and the Romantic Times Reviewer's Choice Award, as well as being named one of Affaire de Coeur's top ten favorite romance writers. Edwards has a reputation for meticulously researching the proper anthropological backgrounds of each tribe she writes about.
Edwards and her husband Charles, a retired high school biology teacher, have been married for over 50 years. They have two sons, Charles and Brian, and three grandchildren. The family lived in St. Louis, Missouri for over thirty years, but now reside in Mattoon, Illinois.
I love the Savage series by Cassie Edwards. All the books are great and so is this one. The Seminole tribe is hiding deep in the Everglades. He is the chief and watched the plantation she lives on with her husband, daughter, slaves and brother-in-law. Her marriage was arranged by their families. They are great friends but not in love. Her brother-in-law comes home carrying her husband killed by an arrow in his chest. There is murder and slavery coveted property it is a great and exciting read.
Stunned by the murder of her husband, terrified by the disappearance of her daughter, Lavinia ventured alone into the Everglades, braving its twisting waterways and the dangersous creatures that lurked within. But instead of death, she found life- a peaceful village and a man who vowed to keep her safe at any cost. In Wolf Dancers arms she would know love at last.
There were some parts if the story that were left unfinished, like where did the bow and arrows come from that killed her husband and what was the legend behind the great white panther that would show up every now and then. Not one of Cassie's best stories but still a very good read.
Just not my cup of tea. There was no real conflict. The conflict that there was disappeared too quickly for my tastes. The panther thing didn't make sense to me. It was too fluffy. It could've been really good.