I was interested in this book because, despite it being a romance, the author has been described as an expert in early American pioneer life. Hence it was also a Western.
Did I enjoy it? You bet! There were no surprises. The men were 'real men' and the women were happy about it (though this is not to demean the women in the book; they were in the main highly skilled in carving out a family life in what was then a wilderness). It was also predictably full of nefarious plots against the heroes and heroines which they had to negotiate to bring about the inevitable happy ending.
Why did I enjoy it so much if the plot was almost cliched? Garlock's prose was very easy to read and the descriptions of life in general at the time seemed realistic, at least to me, and were not a straightforward hankering of a time past. The disadvantages of life at the time such as loneliness, the scarcity of opportunities for pleasure in the daily grind and the lack of laws, or at least the absence of any meaningful machinery to enforce the laws, meant that many settlements were populated by less than savoury menfolk. Hence the reason why there was so many adventures in the book!
So, an easy and enjoyable read which did not stretch the intellect. My one regret, however, was that I bought this book on a recommendation and as an ebook and I didn't know it was the second book in a trilogy (nor did it have the ludicrous picture on its front displayed above. If it did, I probably wouldn't have read it, though I don't know why). Naturally, I now feel compelled to read parts 1 and 3 ... so I will be reading at least 2 more Dorothy Garlock books in the future. Let's hope they entertain as much as this one did.