Disclosure: This is a book that I received through a Goodreads giveaway.
It's just me. I don't really care for romance novels and this is definitely a romance novel. If you like them, or if you are a Janet Dailey fan, I'm sure you will like this book.
The book follows the Champion family as they attend the Pro Bull Riding finals in Las Vegas. Oldest sister, Tess, is in charge of her bulls and ecstatic to be among the elite of the stock providers. Youngest sister, Lexie, is pregnant. That seems to be her purpose in the book. Middle sister, Val, is the drama queen, always down on herself, always pushing people, including a past love, away from her and with a past as a mob girlfriend and a murder witness. She's constantly on guard, and constantly making really stupid choices. It's a standard, will they get together, will they split up, will past choices haunt Val?
My issues start with the cover art - it shows a ranch house in snow. The nearest town is Ajo, Arizona, which has a temperature range of 41 to 101 with an average snowfall of 0 inches.
Second, the sisters are the usual romance novel sisters: one brunette, one redhead and one blonde. I don't know how these families always manage to have three girls with the distinct hair color like that. Genetics just doesn't work that way.
There are a lot of hot, muscular bull riders in the book. I have know bull riders and the ones that I've known are rather rangy, lanky guys. They also suffer from concussions rather frequently and many of them, when I was younger, refused to wear helmets or helmets weren't even an option then. Thus, a number of riders suffer from C.T.E. just like NFL players. The writer doesn't address this. In her view, they are all upstanding. God-fearing, wonderful men. There is no mention of domestic abuse. There is no mention of drug addiction from the numerous pain killers they take to continue to ride through rather substantial injuries.
I have also known a rodeo clown. He was definitely not built, but more in the line of soft and squishy and the least likely person to work a rodeo that I have ever know. When I asked him why? how?, he responded it was because he was in love with a bull rider. Gay riders are not addressed here and I got the feeling that heterosexuality was perceived to be the only sexual choice of these riders.
If you like these types of books, more power to you. I'm not a fan.