- Shifting Calder Wind and Green Calder Grass were both New York Times and USA Today bestsellers.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
CALDER FANS WON'T BE DISAPPOINTED!,
By
This review is from: Lone Calder Star (Hardcover)
In this latest installment of the Calder saga, Janet Dailey displays the hallmarks that made the earlier Calder books such a critical and commercial success. The story takes us to Texas and the Cee Bar Ranch, home of the first Calder ancestor, Seth. Lawman Clint Echohawk, still mourning the loss of his father, travels from Montana to the ranch in Texas to manage the ranch and investigate the suspicious ongoings there. Sparks fly between Quint and Dallas, a waitress/student who eventually, along with her endearing grandfather Empty, move into the ranch as hired hands. Whether fighting the corrupt schemes of neighbouring rancher Max Rutledge, or feelings for his new love Dallas, Quint Echohawk reminds us why we love the Calder men...they're strength, pride, and tenderness. All in all, this is a very welcome addition to the Calder Saga. No Calders are killed of in this book (thank you Ms. Dailey...I was running out of kleenex) but the plot is nonetheless well-paced and keeps you hooked! If you are a fan of the earlier books in the Calder saga, this book will take you back home!
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Getting better,
By
This review is from: Lone Calder Star (Hardcover)
I'm pleased to say that this latest Calder book is much better than the last one. While I don't think the newer books will ever be as good as the first few in the series, I hope Ms. Dailey continues to improve. This book doesn't take place on the Triple C ranch, and I think it could easily be read as a stand-alone book for someone who never read the earlier books. Chase, Cat and Jessy are mentioned, but you don't really need to know any of the Calder history to understand this book. The story focuses on Quint Echohawk, Cat's son with Logan. As with all the Calder men, he is strong and honorable. Jessy sends him to the Cee Bar ranch, the land they own in Texas, to see what's going on there. The last ranch hand on the Cee Bar has up and left without telling anyone or giving a reason. After arriving in Texas, Quint quickly learns that the Rutledges are responsible for scaring off all the employees. They are trying to buy all the land in the area, and they're using any means necessary to do it. The first person Quint gets to know in Texas is Dallas, a waitress/store clerk/student who has some experience of her own with the Rutledges. She and her grandfather, Empty Garner, were forced to sell their ranch to the Rutledges. Quint thinks she's pretty, but he assumes she's younger than she is. He thinks she's in high school. (He later learns she's legal, and then the sparks fly.) I won't tell the story, but Empty and Dallas end up working on the ranch with Quint and they all fight the Rutledges together. Also, I don't know if this is a "spoiler" or not, but Ms. Dailey has decided NOT to kill off any major characters in this book! Hallelujah!
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
First-time Janet Daily Reader,
By
This review is from: Lone Calder Star (Hardcover)
As stated, this was the first novel of hers I've read. I have the paperback version. I had a book I hated, took it to my bookstore and got this one instead (it was the same price, not the best way to pick a book).
I sat on it for a few months before I finally picked it up. I found I should have picked it up much earlier. I enjoyed the novel. I do agree with one of the reviews that some of the characters were a bit "unwritten" but I still liked it and not having read any of the other Calder novels, it was still easy to follow. The one thing I liked about it, well sometimes in novels you can just sit there and think, yeah ok, that's never going to happen. I really think that this type of situation exists and she wrote it as it may have happened anywhere. I really enjoyed the way the characters talked. No one really talks like that anymore and I miss it. Big business doesn't care about who and what they take over either and I thought Daily wrote truthfully about that as well, but didn't throw it in my face. So, all in all, it was a good book. I hated putting it down. :) A-
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