A beautiful half-Indian, half-white young woman, Dawnmarie Garrett flees for her life when a band of renegade Sioux kill her English father and she prays that White Wolf, her warrior lover and Chief of the Chippewa, will save her.
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.
Mom could not wait to start reading... mom? Why is your hand raised? Do you mind if I start this one pleassse? Sure, Go for it. Okay guys so along time ago there was a girl who had just started reading romance and whose library had a slime slecetion. She happened to be on a search in the Large Print section and stumbled a cross a Large Print copy of a Cassie Edwards book.( Boy was that cover the most plant covered you could ever find. It looked like one of the reilgious Hallmark Card. Yeah, about as far as you can get from steamy romance covers most people picture.) Any who she got the book and fell even more in love with the romance genre and those a special place was born for Cassie Edwards. I have read no other Cassie Edwards books and have not been able to reread the one I speak of sense my Library got read of it. Sigh. Anyway years later I remember the book and decided sense I was a big girl and had my own money that I would go buy me copy. Turns out that It was part of a series and you are looking at the end result. Oh how touching. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I get it. Okay back to you. Well mom and I both found it very fun. Seriously a lot happens in this tiny 300 page book. Like a whole series worth of something. The setting and characters felt were nice and nothing felt offensive. (I know we are jinxing our selves because now someone will type us telling us how offensive it is. I would like to point at that we were not looking to hard. ) Any way Mom was on a rock and roll of nostalgia and finished the book in three days. Not the best book ever, but the nostalgic fun made the read well worth it.