Her fragile beauty was as dazzling as the western landscape. Her eyes mirrored the brilliant blue of the cloudless sky; her hair shone with the gold of the sun and the silver of the moon. From miner to gold rush millionaire, the men of Virginia City, Nevada, scrambled for just a smile from the lovely Chastity Morrow.
No one was closer to Chastity than her father's handsome business manager, Jonathon Stoneworth. He knew she could be cold and thoughtless, a child scarred by painful memories. He disdained the defiant girl who taunted him; he was captivated by the desirable, vulnerable woman.
But Chastity was obsessed with the one man she could not have completely. A man who would sacrifice her romantic innocence to his own desires and ruthless ambition. Chastity wanted to believe that surrendering her heart to him would bring the happiness she yearned for. Yet only the cruel hurt of shattered dreams would awaken Chastity to the real passion of a woman's love.
Rosanne Frances Lipps was born on July 20, 1951 in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. She married David F. Kohake, and had three children: Beth, David Jr., and Claire. They lived in the western part of Hamilton County, they have rebuilt the two-story house on thirty acres that they bought because the price was good. She had been writing since her childhood, and as homemaker and mother of three, she found time to write romance novels on her typewriter at home.
As Rosanne Kohake published three historical romances from 1984 to 1985 by Avon Books. Her novels were placed in different moments of the United States of America's history. Her first novel, For Honor's Lady, was set in the American Revolution; her second novel, Chastity Morrow, in the American West, and her last novel, Ambrosia, in the Civil War. Her novels have been translated into other languages, and her debut novel, For Honor's Lady, was selected as one of the All-Time Favorites & Classics by the Romantic Times Magazine.
Rosie passed away on March 7, 2012 in her native Cincinnati.