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Rating:  Summary: Excellent Review: Great book. Couldn't put it down. Characters were believable and likable. The plot kept you entertained. If you like romance novels that do not have a lot of silly arguing and graphic sex scenes...this is for you. This book treats the reader to an interesting plot and characters that grow fond of each other in addition to being sexually attracted to each other.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent Review: I was not disappointed in this book. I thoroughly enjoyed this story. Lelie Lafoy makes you feel as though you are right there in the story. You can see the scenes so clearly. The story is very different than anything I have ever read. You can really understand why Maddie does not have any hope for the future. You respect how Rivlan fights against is strong feelings for Maddie and is ethical responsibility. The obstacles that these two have to overcome makes the story that much more interesting. I really like both of them. I would recommend this to anyone who is looking for a wonderful romance.
Rating:  Summary: First time Leslie Lafoy reader Review: I was not disappointed in this book. I thoroughly enjoyed this story. Lelie Lafoy makes you feel as though you are right there in the story. You can see the scenes so clearly. The story is very different than anything I have ever read. You can really understand why Maddie does not have any hope for the future. You respect how Rivlan fights against is strong feelings for Maddie and is ethical responsibility. The obstacles that these two have to overcome makes the story that much more interesting. I really like both of them. I would recommend this to anyone who is looking for a wonderful romance.
Rating:  Summary: Appealing read Review: In 1871 in the Oklahoma Territory, schoolteacher Maddie Rutledge searches for one of her students, nine-year-old Lucy Three Trees. When she finds the little girl, the sight she sees makes Maddie ill. Caleb Foley is raping the young Indian. Caleb hears Maddie and goes after her, but she kills him in an obvious self-defense situation. However, Caleb's influential family sat on the bench and in the jury leading to a conviction with a twenty-year sentence for Maddie.Two years later, US Marshal Rivlin Kilpatrick escorts the now free Maddie to testify against the corrupt Foley family although he expected a male. Rivlin believes Maddie is a cold-hearted killer, but on their way from Ft. Larned, Kansas to Oklahoma, he begins to reassess his prisoner. As they struggle to survive attack after attack on them from enemies trying to keep her from testifying, Rivlin and Maddie fall in love. MADDIE'S JUSTICE is an appealing western romantic suspense that uses elements of a nineteenth century legal procedural to enhance the action and adventure. The story line is fast-aced, whether it is on the trail or looking at frontier justice. Maddie is a complete caring character while Rivlin embodies the strong lawman of that century. Fans of the sub-genre will find Leslie LaFoy's tale to be a quality novel that never eases up the tension or accelerator until the final page is completed. Harriet Klausner
Rating:  Summary: Appealing read Review: In 1871 in the Oklahoma Territory, schoolteacher Maddie Rutledge searches for one of her students, nine-year-old Lucy Three Trees. When she finds the little girl, the sight she sees makes Maddie ill. Caleb Foley is raping the young Indian. Caleb hears Maddie and goes after her, but she kills him in an obvious self-defense situation. However, Caleb's influential family sat on the bench and in the jury leading to a conviction with a twenty-year sentence for Maddie. Two years later, US Marshal Rivlin Kilpatrick escorts the now free Maddie to testify against the corrupt Foley family although he expected a male. Rivlin believes Maddie is a cold-hearted killer, but on their way from Ft. Larned, Kansas to Oklahoma, he begins to reassess his prisoner. As they struggle to survive attack after attack on them from enemies trying to keep her from testifying, Rivlin and Maddie fall in love. MADDIE'S JUSTICE is an appealing western romantic suspense that uses elements of a nineteenth century legal procedural to enhance the action and adventure. The story line is fast-aced, whether it is on the trail or looking at frontier justice. Maddie is a complete caring character while Rivlin embodies the strong lawman of that century. Fans of the sub-genre will find Leslie LaFoy's tale to be a quality novel that never eases up the tension or accelerator until the final page is completed. Harriet Klausner
Rating:  Summary: Peril and Lust in Cowtown! Review: It took grit and gumption to make a go of it on the frontier prairie, but it was a land of escape and new beginnings. So Maddie Rutledge came west to escape a cheerless orphanage and a mirthless childhood. But when 19th century greed and corruption forced her to commit a murder in self-defense, she was a woman alone...facing a bleak future as a federal prisoner. Rivlin Kilpatrick was also on the run: from the horrors of the Civil War that haunted him and from his failure to take a place in his prestigious family as a titan of industry. It seemed routine: A U.S. Marshal transporting a federal prisoner. But someone wanted one or both of them dead and suddenly, they were forced to flee. From the bawdy brothels of a Kansas Cowtown to the power rich drawing rooms of High Society Cincinnati, Rivlin and Maddie play a high stakes game to stay one jump ahead of the tightening web of deadly political intrigue...and are forced to turn to each other to fill the empty hollows of their hearts. This is a superb rendering of the Wild, Wild West with a clever cast of supporting characters that deftly deliver Leslie Lafoy's trademark wit and humor. But the page-turning tension is driven by villains deadlier than a rattlesnake in tall grass and a romance that builds and paints the sky like a prairie dawn. Saddle up, Cowgirls, and get ready for a wonderful ride!
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