Publisher's Weekly Review
Kate Blakely is trying to hold together a farm in Oregon near the turn of the century after her husband's reported drowning. Kate wishes she could erase the memory of his abusive behavior towards both herself and her traumatized four-year-old daughter, Miranda. His equally rough brother, Ryan, insists that Kate marry him, and threatens to take Miranda away. Meanwhile, Kate's handsome new neighbor, Zachariah McGovern, withstands rattlesnake bites to rescue Miranda from a well, and Kate takes him into her home to nurse him back to health. After Zachariah accidentally discovers why Kate's rose garden flourishes while the rest of her land produces little, the two make a marriage of convenience so that Zachariah can adopt Miranda and keep her from Ryan's clutches. Anderson ( Comanche Heart ) has a talent for drawing characters. Kate is portrayed sympathetically as a self-protective woman who has suffered, but the historical setting is less convincing. It seems unlikely, for instance, that a late 19th-century farmer could intuit modern psychiatric techniques, as Zachariah appears to do when he employs doll play to get Miranda to tell him about past abuse. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Booklist Review
Anderson tells the story of Kate, an 1890 farm owner, and her daughter, Miranda. Through Kate's memories and Anderson's foreword, readers learn that Kate's former husband abused her and Miranda. To save her daughter, Kate killed her violent spouse and buried him in her rose garden. New neighbor Zach McGovern is intrigued by his neighbor who panicks when a dog starts digging in her roses. When Miranda falls down a well full of snakes, Zach puts his life in danger to save her, and Kate nurses him back to health. But her former husband's brother insists that unless Kate marries him, he'll investigate his brother's death. Zach believes a very different marriage may solve the problem. In this long unavailable novel first published in 1993, the now super-popular Anderson realistically tackles serious issues within an engrossing and enjoyable romance.--Alessio, Amy Copyright 2010 Booklist
Library Journal Review
Kate Blakely and her four-year-old daughter are aided by neighbor Zachariah McGovern as they fight the mental, emotional, and legal results of Kate's late husband's insanity-driven abuse in this gripping, heart-twisting tale that was first published in 1993 by Harper Monogram and won the Romance Writers of America's now-discontinued Janet Dailey Award for romance novels that raise public awareness of serious social issues. Fans will be shouting for joy that this classic has been reissued. (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.