|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
7 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Cattle Drive Romance,
By Jutzie (Surprise, AZ) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Tall, Dark, and Lonesome: A Loveswept Classic Romance (Kindle Edition)
Tall, Dark and Lonesome by Debra Dixon eISBN-978-0-307-80360-3
Zack Weston and his horse Dap are watching as his four ranch hands and nine city slickers are moving his head of twelve hundred cattle for the autumn cattle drive. His biggest decision at the moment is whether to run for Wyoming State Assembly or not. John Carey, one of his ranch hands informs him of the pretty woman reporter he has on the chuck wagon. Zack goes to check on her and finds the wagon stuck in the mud, after helping her get out and set up, Zack has something new on his mind. Niki Devlin cannot believe her boss, Eli, has tricked her into coming back to Cutter's Creek, Wyoming and to a cattle drive on top of it! She left for college eight years ago and only returns for big occasions. Her life and work is in New York now. She has her own syndicated column, Heartbeat, and her boss thought a series of adventures would be great writing material. Right! It is raining, she has the chuck wagon stuck in the mud, she is in charge of cooking and she don't cook and now mister tall, dark and handsome is coming to her rescue only to find out after teasing him that he is the boss man. Zack and Niki get to know each other and grow closer each day on the trail. After a few days when Niki finds out Zack may go into politics she backs away. With her past she cannot be in the limelight, it would ruin his career. Cutter Creek is a small town though and the gossips don't let things go, which is why Niki had left and not come back. Zack has issues with believing people will stay, his mom died when he was six and his dad goes through wives so often Zack is not sure anymore how many times he's been married. It is a great trail ride with fun adventures. Brass and Snickers are Zack's cattle dogs are full of fun. John the ranch hand is always full of practical jokes, the five lawyers love coming once a year to play cowboy and you even get to meet Bess, the retired chuck wagon cook. Contains subtle sexual situations. Book received through NetGalley for review
5.0 out of 5 stars
Cowboy Romance,
This review is from: Tall, Dark, and Lonesome: A Loveswept Classic Romance (Kindle Edition)
I read this book when it first came out and am thrilled that it has now found its way to Kindle. Sweet and sexy with a good bit of humor thrown in. I would recommend this to anyone who enjoys cowboys and romance.
4.0 out of 5 stars
romance and cattle drive,
By
This review is from: Tall, Dark, and Lonesome: A Loveswept Classic Romance (Kindle Edition)
I enjoyed reading Tall,Dark and Lonesome. I liked how Niki could laugh at herself.
We first meet Niki when she is riding a chuck wagon for a cattle drive her New York editor signed her up for in Wyoming. Niki was actually from this small area and had only been back in 8 years for quick visits. She was late arriving so she got first dab at the chuckwagon but she got it stuck in the mud. She was trying to get it out when she fell in the mud and sat on her hair and was laughing when Zach first met her. Zach did not tell her he was the trailboss or ranch owner or one of the Westons who owned a lot of property in wyoming and was thinking of a run at politics. Niki did not bring a tent just bought extra warm sleeping bag. when Zach got back to camp and saw her not sleeping in tent he woke her and made her sleep in his tent, with him and his two cattle dogs. It was fun to read about romance of cattle drives and cowboys. Watch them fall in love and Zach kept on chasing her telling her she can run but not hide. Niki job and life was in New York. She hated wyoming and small town gossip especially about her. New if Zach learned about her history he would not want to know her. Zach has a hard time trusting women that they won't leave him after his mom died when he was six and after his dad fourth marriage gave up on his stepmoms staying. I was given this ebook from Netgalley in exchange for honest review.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Sweet and Sassy,
By Zeallie (Allen TX) - See all my reviews
This review is from: TALL, DARK AND LONESOME (Loveswept) (Mass Market Paperback)
Tall, Dark And Lonesome written by Debra Dixon is about a woman forced to face her past in small town America, and a strong cowboy fighting his father's demons. Niki Devlin ran from Cutter's Creek Wyoming after high school to New York, she ran from mistakes and pain the small town wouldn't let her forget; now she's come back for work. She is writing a column on extreme vacations, her destination is a cattle run on a ranch not far from where she grew up. Zack Weston is the owner of the ranch the cattle drive is held on, also a candidate for the state senate; he falls in love with Niki while she tries to hide a past from him that she's afraid will ruin his political aspirations.
It was a good book, typical romantic novel, where you knew how it would end, but it had some interesting ways to get there. It had some definite humorous parts as well as parts you wanted to pull your hair out and scream at the heroine to just tell him already. I would suggest it others, especially if you were looking for a shorter novel, with a very handsome cowboy, good sex scenes, that were tastefully written, and at times had you where you didn't know whether to laugh or throttle the heroine.
4.0 out of 5 stars
sweet love story!,
This review is from: Tall, Dark, and Lonesome: A Loveswept Classic Romance (Kindle Edition)
Classic romance of a woman with a past and a hero with a future. Was a quick and easy read of a fast romance over a cattle drive.
*I won this book from a twitter giveaway
4.0 out of 5 stars
Grab your cowboy hat and get read for an adventure.,
By BookLover "ldosch@aol.com" (Valley Cottage, New York USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Tall, Dark, and Lonesome: A Loveswept Classic Romance (Kindle Edition)
Tall, Dark and Lonesome reminds us why we love cowboys such much - YUM! The story involves a young reporter, funny and fun-loving Niki Devlin, who is sent to write a column about a Wyoming Trail Ride run by (hunky) Zach Weston. Niki isn't happy about returning to this small town which she left in the dust for the bright lights of New York City. The story takes us for a ride along the beautiful Wyoming countryside. Along the way we have fun with the other "city-folk" out there for a vacation adventure. We are swept up right away with the romance between our lead characters, Niki and Zach. The story only falls short in that it ends too early and we needed to spend more time with the incredible and wise Grandma Betty. This story is certainly worth reading
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Started Cute but Fell Apart,
By Tracy "One Good Book Deserves Another" (Fort Myers, Florida, USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
This review is from: Tall, Dark, and Lonesome: A Loveswept Classic Romance (Kindle Edition)
New York City newspaper columnist Niki Devlin gave her editor just enough rope to hang her with when she blurted out that she was from the small town of Cutter's Creek, Wyoming after he proposed a series of columns on adventure vacations and mentioned a ranch there that ran a modern day cattle drive. He certainly wasn't going to let her weasel out of the assignment, so she had no choice but to suck it up, do her job, and get gone. She'd have to. Even after all these years, she's still the hometown pariah. Still the source of gossip and fodder for past mistakes. And she still bears the scars of the emotional pain and loss of what happened all those years ago.
The female reporter doing a series of articles on the drive is a bit of an enigma to ranch owner and trail boss Zach Weston. An up and comer in the state's political scene, his party is pushing him to run for state senate, and he's going to make the decision to run or not while out on the trail - the best place for him to get his mind straight. The problem is the delectable Niki and the instant attraction he feels for her. It keeps his mind anywhere but straight from the moment of their less than auspicious introduction. She's lively and bright, witty and sexy, and it doesn't take long for him to figure out who she really is. What he doesn't know is what darkness lies behind the wall she defends with a breezy free spirit and lots of sass. Whatever it is, Zach is confident he's ready to deal with it, because the closer she lets him get, the more he realizes that he wants Niki in his life for far longer than the span of a cattle drive. ~*~ It started so well. Both characters made great first impressions. I was charmed by Niki's spunky personality and smart mouth, and Zach's rugged intensity was coupled with an appealing playful charm. Their chemistry was instant and strong and their dialogue was fun and flirty. The back drop for the romance, the cattle drive, brought to mind fond memories of the movie City Slickers, still a favorite of mine after all these years. All told, Tall, Dark, and Lonesome was working for me very well at the beginning. Then the beginning ended. Zack and Niki's burgeoning relationship began early enough in the book to surprise me. I prefer characters at least get introduced and fleshed out a bit for the reader before their relationship starts, and there just wasn't enough of that groundwork laid by the time they start to first cave to their attraction at the 11% mark. To be fair, that 11% mark turned out to be very misleading. The book length is listed at 240 pages[...], but I read on a 2nd Gen Kindle, so I don't see page numbers. I have locations and percentages (which seem to have no correlation to page numbers whatsoever that I've ever been able to tell). As it turns out, this story ended at the 57% mark, or location 2078 of 3594 on the Galley that was provided to me for this review. The remaining 43% provided previews of other Loveswept titles. Given that, the romantic relationship between Zack and Niki actually started about 20% into the story. Still quick for me given where the story was at the time, but less so. The bigger problem for me was how Niki's personality changed so completely after the romance started to develop. Gone was the spunk and sass and instead she became rather quiet and maudlin about her past and negative about any potential future with Zack. And she had a ridiculously inflated opinion of her own relevance in her hometown given the way she still felt so persecuted and judged by everyone there for getting knocked up by a high school football player at sixteen. Despite the many years that have passed since then (close to or near ten, if I understood correctly), she still doesn't go home often and when she does, she slinks in and out like a thief in the night because of the town's prejudice against her. She's also asked her family not to mention her or bring her up to other people despite living for years in New York City and having a successful career as a nationally syndicated columnist. That seemed amazingly excessive to me, especially as readers are given no evidence of any lingering prejudice against her in the book. It's hard to think of her vehemence and continued angst over it as anything more than an unappealing persecution complex. Then there was the fact that Zach was going into politics and this sent Niki into a meltdown. The idea of living in a fishbowl gave her a panic attack and she was sure that any relationship he had with her would ruin his career because of her past. This is where it felt like the original publication date of December 1993 made a negative impact. An eighteen year span of time that includes a Presidential impeachment, several dozen salacious political scandals on state and federal levels, a massive influx of pernicious reality television, a Vice Presidential nominee with a daughter who is an unwed teen-aged mother, and a disturbing trend in the social-sexual revolution (or...you know...tweeting/texting pictures of...optimistic genitalia to any and every potential sexual partner on the planet) has sort of inured me to the scandal potential of a teen pregnancy that ended in miscarriage a decade before a potential couple even knew each other. Just saying. And you know what? All of that still wasn't what really killed the book for me. Truth is, the book had some fun and entertaining moments and those moments helped balance out my issues. Well...most of them, anyway. Then came the iceberg that sunk the ship. Zach and Niki have a sweet, tender, slow and sensual love scene that would have been fantastic...had either of them even once discussed, addressed, or even thought about protection or birth control - or used any. And it isn't until long minutes after they have sex, after some cuddling, kissing, and pillow talk, that the issue of birth control (not STDs, mind you, just birth control) is even alluded to. Some authors and readers prefer it that way, thinking it's more romantic if it's not mentioned during the deed. Personally, I don't agree, but can understand the opinion...to a point. That point doesn't extend to story or a main character who has done nothing but dwell on how horribly she was treated by the people in her hometown for getting pregnant when she was a teenager and still feels terribly guilty about a miscarriage she had a decade ago. In fact, the complete failure to even give a passing thought to birth control in this particular story with these particular characters in that particular situation was such a glaring oversight that I was quite literally gobsmacked by the whole sexual interlude and its aftermath. If that wasn't bad enough, once it finally was mentioned, and the sudden jolt of reality sunk in, this was the thought process of the woman who is supposedly still so ravaged by an entire town of judgmental and prejudiced people that she hardly ever visits the family she loves and has been panicking about how her reputation would ruin her future with Zack: QUOTE: Slow down, Niki. Lightning won't strike again. At that point I had two choices: set my Kindle down for a while or slam it against the floor over and over and over again until it was in nothing but itty bitty pieces, because that had to be the single most ignorant and cavalier thing she could have possibly thought about a potential pregnancy at that moment. And she continues to have unprotected sex with the man over a period of several days! Maybe this story is even more a victim of the year it was originally released than I'd thought. It's true that there is little I dislike more than a dated "contemporary" romance. Maybe I'm too disinclined to leniency in this case. Be that as it may, the birth control debacle was a coup de grāce so egregious to me that any glimmer of entertainment in the story disappeared completely. Honestly, I'd unread it if I could. Disclosure: An ARC of this book was provided to me by Loveswept publisher Random House via NetGalley. This rating, review, and all included thoughts and comments are my own. ~*~*~*~ Reviewed for One Good Book Deserves Another. |
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
TALL, DARK AND LONESOME (Loveswept) by Debra Dixon (Mass Market Paperback - November 1, 1993)
Used & New from: $0.01
| ||