"Pleasant diversion"
Kiss That Cowboy by Gayle Kaye. Magazine writer
Candace Porter travels to Texas to prove that cowboys are
not any sexier than the general male population, which
means duds and zeros. After a few days of nothing to write
home to mother let alone a magazine about, Candace meets
ranch owner Tanner Carson and she knows she has found her
personal cowboy centerfold. This contemporary western
romance is an entertaining battle of the sexes starring an
adorable hunk. However, the tale lacks humor and Candace
is a stereotype of a tenderfoot, making her an ineffective
heroine. How the Sheriff Was Won by Anne Gracie. Jassie
McQuilty inherits a small newspaper in Bear Claw, Montana
from her great-uncle. However, the will contains a
stipulation that Jassie must stay in town and publish the
newspaper for one year or lose everything. Jassie expects
three hundred and sixty five days of boredom until she
meets Sheriff John T. Stone. This contemporary western
romance also provides readers with an enjoyable gender
battle, but though it has its amusing moments lacks the
jocular bite expected of this imprint. John T. is a
powerful lead male, but Jassie is a split personality. She
is adorable when she works the presses, but pitiable when
she goes for a short fling. Gayle Kaye and Anne Gracie provide pleasant diversions,
but neither tale attains the consistent witty crunch with
strong characters the audience expects from Duets. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted October 19, 2001
SummaryHow The Sheriff Was Won
One year. That's how long Jassie McQuilty has to stay in
Bear Claw, Montana, before she can sell her great-uncle's
newspaper. So while she's here, she might as well have some
fun! When she literally runs into Sheriff John T. Stone, he
has the word fling written all over him. He also doesn't
want anything to do with Jassie or her big-city ideas. He
was burned once by a woman, and doesn't plan on going
through that again. But Jassie's determined...determined to
get her man!
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