The term "super novel" is often used to indicate a larger than normal sized novel, but I use it here to indicate that not only is this novel hefty sized but the story is a "super" story as well. Any reader who finished "Murphy's Law," the first novel in the "Damaged Heroes" series will know that the main man in this story, Ross Kennedy, got left out in the cold when Katie Murphy married her true love, Seth Remington. Now Ross is drowning his sorrows and his loneliness in hours and hours of legal briefs, contracts, wills, and such. A well-to-do Chicago attorney, Ross is well on his way to partner in his prestigious law firm and yet he is on the verge of a break-down in more ways than one. So his senior partner sends him to Montana to get a signature on legal papers for one of their clients as well as putting him in a remote area of the States in the hope that he can unwind a little. Caught in one of Montana's legendary blizzards and nearly buried in a car that was stuck in a ditch, Ross was near death when Laurie Miller happened to see the top of his car from her window and managed to get him out and into her house where she slowly brought him back to life. Not really knowing anything about him, she gave him her mother's maiden name as her own, and in a bazaar setting, their unusual relationship began. Dr. Laurie Miller would not ordinarily be at the ranch, but she, too, was suffering burn-out and had come for a couple of weeks of rest in the hope that her empathic gift could be regenerated. She had become so numb with weariness that she could no longer detect her patients' emotional state. She couldn't read Ross, either, but later on she realized that her mother, who was also an empath, couldn't read her dad, either. This is a wonderful love story between two people who almost always over-organized, over-analyzed, and overworked their lives and everyone around them. They were also both hampered, although in different ways. Ross was so closed off because of the damage done to his family of origin as well as his failed relationship with Katie Murphy, and Laurie was closed off as a self-protective device because getting too close to other people meant that her empathic sense was nearly always overwhelmed to the point of pain. Their story was complicated by personal prejudice, miscommunication, old relational baggage, personal lifestyle, and carefully hidden insecurities. Throw in a psychopath who is stalking Laurie and threatening the lives of the people she loves, and you have a complicated, compelling, riveting story that won't turn loose of the reader's mind, keeps one on the edge of the chair, and yet is massively entertaining. Ms James just keeps on producing these stories that involve such realistic characters and placing them within the context of a cast of secondary characters who are, themselves, wonderfully crafted and whose presence is not accidental. This novel is extensive enough that the reader can watch these two people work through some significant feelings, issues that are left over from the past, and vicariously experience their inner healing. Both these hide bound individuals learn what it means to do something that is not thought to death, that is a bit of impulse, but is still good for them both. In the case of Ross and Laurie, "free falling" was one of the best things they did. Don't miss this one. It's been out for a while, but still should be read and enjoyed by romance fiction fans.