7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
One of the worst romances I have ever read, September 8, 2007
This review is from: Shadow Bear (Signet Historical Romance) (Paperback)
The characters are very stereotyped--there is no detail that makes them come alive. why is the Shiona attracted to Shadow Bear other than the fact that he's handsome and she has no where else to go. If there are no other reasons, a well-rounded character would express some insight or doubt about her choice. there just is no descriptive detail as to their feelings or actions.
The action also is the same as that I have read in dozens of other books.
The chief or best warrior always thinks the white woman is the most beautiful woman he has ever seen.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
fun Indian romance, July 6, 2007
This review is from: Shadow Bear (Signet Historical Romance) (Paperback)
In 1850 South Dakota, Lakota chief Shadow Bear grieves the deaths of his grandpa and parents killed two moons ago by buffalo hunters. Now his grandmother Dancing Breeze informs him of a vision she just had in which a fire will destroy much of the area; he has the tribe build trenches to save their village while he searches for his missing younger brother Silent Arrow.
With the death of their father by an arrow with special feathers, Shiona Bramlett, her younger brother Seth and their mom head east. The siblings leave the stagecoach to go to a cave where their father hid gold. However, they hear shots and return to the coach to find everyone dead with the same type of arrow that killed their father. Seth and Shiona reach the cave where she drinks water that seems okay. Seth looks around only to return with that arrow in his chest; he dies. A fire from lightning saves Shiona's life. Shiona wakes up feeling ill from the water she drank when an Indian arrives with that designer arrow in his shoulder. He directs her in removing it and gives her medicine for her fever before leaving. With the fire out, Shadow Bear finds Shiona and takes her to his village. As Shiona and Shadow Dancer fall in love, she fears the killer is lurking nearby.
Though this is the typical; Cassie Edwards' tale starring a noble Indian leader and a pure of heart white female as the lead couple, this is a delightful pairing. Shadow Bear's grandmother adds mysticism to the mix and the rest of the tribe especially his brother and his sister-in-law provide depth. Although the use of Lakota words with English translations is distracting and the villain severely burned in the fire rides a horse, kills people, and abducts the heroine which seems implausible, Ms. Edwards' fans will enjoy her latest Indian romance.
Harriet Klausner
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