

I didn't find Promise Canyon to be one of the stronger books in Robyn Carr's Virgin River series, but it was still a pretty good read that had several positive points. It will take all the openness and honesty Clay can muster to convince Lilly that he's nothing like her old boyfriend and wants more than anything to be a part of her life forever. Misunderstanding things she sees and exchanges she overhears between the couple, Lilly thinks Clay was dishonest with her and chooses to retreat into the familiar anger of the past. Just when she thinks she might have finally found the one Native man she can respect, Clay's ex comes to town. The man quietly and confidently insinuates himself into her life, leaving Lilly helpless to resist his charms. Whenever she's around him, he stirs long-dormant feelings in her. In fact, she's had her fill of Native men in general and has been trying to distance herself from her culture, but she can't deny that Clay is extremely attractive. Unfortunately, she's a bit stand-offish, so convincing her to go out with him proves a major challenge for Clay.Īfter a teenage romance gone bad, Lilly Yazhi has avoided Navajo men like the plague. He's instantly smitten by her beauty and her uncanny ability to communicate with the horses which rivals his own. There he meets the lovely, young, Hopi woman who delivers their feed every week. Needing a fresh start away from the complicated relationship with his tempting ex, Clay accepts a position working for an old friend, Virgin River's resident veterinarian, Nathaniel Jensen. Despite eventually divorcing, Clay had a hard time ending things between them for good.

Because of his Native American heritage, her bigoted father always looked down on him. Several years earlier he had married an heiress to a horse breeding fortune, but he never felt like much more than a novelty in her world of wealth a privilege.

Cosmo Red Hot Reads from Harlequin Launch.
