How does the author manage every time to make me feel this much? This time, she didn’t even pull her punches. She held my heart in her palm by the end of the first chapter, and she crushed it without flinching.
Agatha is supposed to marry Ansen, but after a big revelation, the wedding is off. Ten years later, a drunk decision brings them together once again. Aggie has built a life of her own, staying in control all the time, while Ansen’s has been crumbling, pushing him farther from his dreams. Without their difficult past and their family troubles, they could probably build something together, but it isn’t that easy.
I was happy to see the Coal Haven crew again. Of course, Ansen is a Barron, though estranged, so he needed to reunite with his family somehow. We don’t see much of their interactions though, but the author still gives some information. In fact, besides Ansen’s brother, Archer, and his wife and kids, and a brief cameo from Isla, we don’t see the Barron clan at all.
There’s too much going on with the Knights family for the Barrons to be more than a blip. While keeping with the small town and the influential family tropes, the author choses a new dynamic. There are still many siblings, and a tyrannical patriarch, but the family’s past and traumas are different. The original drama is the mother running away: it had a terrible impact on every member of the family. And it’s actually at the center of the story.
There’s a clear theme of women taking charge of their life, of women’s independence. You have the woman rejecting responsibilities, the woman controlling her partner’s life, the woman making a life changing decision because she isn’t happy, and of course you have Aggie who ran away from her family so she could find her purpose.
With so many interesting female characters, I admit the male ones fell a bit flat. Even Ansen. His indecision made him kind of weak as a potential partner, while Aggie was putting herself out there. He kept saying that he knew what he wanted, when at the same time he wished for two incompatible things, and sent mixed signals to Aggie. And his motivations weren’t always virtuous.
Their romance, though, was beautiful. Ansen sent Aggie positive messages, helping her with her self confidence after so many attacks. The passion was there, and while many sexy scenes happened off page, there were a lot of talking about them. Their main problem was trust, and it isn’t resolved easily.
Small town, cowboys, family drama, some steam, it works quite well. And the author sets up a few situations that I can’t wait to explore in the next books in the series.
Quickie
- Series: Oil Knights #1 (can be read as a standalone but connected to other series by the author)
- Hashtags: #small town romance #cowboy romance #second chance #workplace romance
- Triggers: mild psychological abuse by a parent, past death
- Main couple: Agatha Knights & Ansen Barron
- Hotness: 3/5
- Romance: 4/5
- + I loved seeing again the people of Coal Haven
- – Ansen’s lack of commitment was annoying