Rating: Summary: ONE OF HER BEST! Review: As a ranch wife married to an honest-to-God cowboy, I usually avoid modern "western" romances. They tend to be cheesy, inaccurate, and basically mind-numbing to anyone who knows the difference. However, after reading all the positive reviews of the storyline of this book, I decided to give her a shot. Wow! Not only did she have a wonderful romance story (one of those books where you wish your man would read it and take notes), but it was realistic. I *know* people like these characters. Clay didn't seem to spend a whole lot of time on his place (who was checking his cows?), but other than that it was true-to-life. *This* book is what real ranchers and cowboys are like. And the romance...*sigh*. Neither character thought they were worthy of the other. Each trying their best to be what the other needs. That's what love should be, I think. :) This is one of those books where you'll close the cover and realize how good it's made you feel. What a gentle, wonderful story. I'm off to find some more! Erin
Rating: Summary: Wow! I never realized what a treasure Eagle is! Review: As a ranch wife married to an honest-to-God cowboy, I usually avoid modern "western" romances. They tend to be cheesy, inaccurate, and basically mind-numbing to anyone who knows the difference. However, after reading all the positive reviews of the storyline of this book, I decided to give her a shot. Wow! Not only did she have a wonderful romance story (one of those books where you wish your man would read it and take notes), but it was realistic. I *know* people like these characters. Clay didn't seem to spend a whole lot of time on his place (who was checking his cows?), but other than that it was true-to-life. *This* book is what real ranchers and cowboys are like. And the romance...*sigh*. Neither character thought they were worthy of the other. Each trying their best to be what the other needs. That's what love should be, I think. :) This is one of those books where you'll close the cover and realize how good it's made you feel. What a gentle, wonderful story. I'm off to find some more! Erin
Rating: Summary: Luke Warm Review: I agree with one of the other reviews that there is just too much dialogue involving the little girl, Claudia. And Savannah really is a little too selfish. It hard to get passed that. The hero is solid though. I can tell that Kathleen Eagle is a very talented writer, though. I plan to look at her other books. This book was a little more mainstream fiction in my opinion.
Rating: Summary: Luke Warm Review: I agree with one of the other reviews that there is just too much dialogue involving the little girl, Claudia. And Savannah really is a little too selfish. It hard to get passed that. The hero is solid though. I can tell that Kathleen Eagle is a very talented writer, though. I plan to look at her other books. This book was a little more mainstream fiction in my opinion.
Rating: Summary: "Eagle Can Do Better" Review: I am a great fan of Kathleen Eagle. "The Last Good Man" is difinately not one of her best works. It was "over" vulgar for Kathleen. The plot was unrealistic (2 yrs after a masdectomy still in depression). This book was a disappointment to me. I know how "Good" most of her books are.
Rating: Summary: Those of us who've been there... Review: I disagree with Ms. Houston in her unsympathetic view of Savannah. She may know women who've had breast cancer, but it's completely different from someone who's had it and survived it. A point no one has brought up, is the fact that Savannah is also suffering from depression. In addition to dealing with the fear and shock of cancer and having a portion of her body amputated, she's also trying to get up out of bed. A woman that has depended on her looks for her whole identity and income, now feels she no longer has that. The book, in my opinion, nails these thoughts and fears. Ms. Eagle did her homework. I would recommend this wonderful book to anyone. It also makes a truly "from the heart" gift for a woman in recovery. The subject is out of the closet. Thank you, Ms. Eagle, for your sensitive approach to a devastating subject.
Rating: Summary: Good story, but not a romance to me. Review: I enjoyed the story, and the writing, but it really didn't seem like a romance to me. The story focuses a lot on Savannah, and her recovery, and I couldn't quite buy the falling in love part. I would have labeled it more women's fiction, because it is really more about her. I rate it a 3 because of my disappointment in it not being a romance, not for poor quality of writing or story.
Rating: Summary: Good Reading Review: I enjoyed this book but found the heroine, Savannah, to be exasperatingly self-absorbed. I loved her daughter, Claudia, though! As a mother and author, of NEW PSALMS FOR NEW MOMS: A KEEPSAKE JOURNAL, I appreciated the bond between mother and daughter. I was also curious about Kole, the elusive Indian who never even appears in the book, but who is the father of little Claudia. But maybe that's another book...
Rating: Summary: Not one of her best Review: I look forward to every new Kathleen Eagle Novel. Her writing is superb and her stories are always so captivating that I can't wait to find out what will happen next. One of the things I've loved best about her books is that her characters don't play mind games with each other. However, this book had the tone of a historical Harlequin romance. Both characters had to constantly guess about the other's feelings and actions. What will he/she think about this? How do they really feel? Does she care that I spent the night at my ex-wife's house? There wasn't enough love or emotion between the characters for my taste. Even at the end, after having been married for many months and coming to terms with their relationship Clay still was unsure whether his wife wanted to stay with him or return to her fast-paced New York life. I much prefer the stories where the characters are both aware of their own feelings, and want to share them with the other. That they don't still have doubts about their relationship even when the story ends. It's worth picking up from the library, but I don't recommend buying it. It's not like "This Time Forever," "Reason to Believe," "Sunrise Song," or even "What the Heart Knows" - it's not one I would care to read again.
Rating: Summary: Issue-sensitive novel saved by extraordinary hero Review: I wanted to love THE LAST GOOD MAN. After all, the heroine is a breast cancer survivor. As a fan of Kathleen Eagle, I was looking forward to her treatment of a sensitive issue, for the people who have/had breast cancer and those who love them. But Savannah Stephens, the heroine in question, very nearly deep sixes all Ms. Eagle's good intentions. Self-involved to the point of pathetic, she spends 95% of the book so prickly and unkind to Clay, the wonderful hero, a man who has always loved her, that she becomes very nearly irredeemable. She has a wonderful, intelligent daughter who adores her, so her reluctance to get out of bed in the morning at the beginning of the book is mind-boggling. She marries her best friend for the sake of her daughter's security, then refuses to share his bed or let him touch her. Clay, meanwhile, suffers a wealth of hurt and dismay as he learns that simply having this woman in his life is not enough. He needs her trust him with her pain, and her withholding of that trust makes this book one of the saddest I have ever read. In the end, as you would expect, Savannah comes around, and when she does it's like all the ice she was buried under melts away to reveal a woman who knows she'd be a fool to let go of such a fantastic man. The finaly chapter saved this book for me and brought it up to a 4-star, as opposed to 3-star, read.
|