Difference between revisions of "Apache Tears"

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[[Category:RWA Award Finalists]]
 
[[Category:RWA Award Finalists]]
 
[[Category:1983 Releases]]
 
[[Category:1983 Releases]]
* '''Series''': [[]]
+
[[Category:Contemporary]]
 
* '''Author''': [[Marianne Clark]]
 
* '''Author''': [[Marianne Clark]]
* '''Publisher''': [[Signet]] [[Rapture]]
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* '''Publisher''': [[Signet Rapture Romance]]
 
* '''Year''': 1983
 
* '''Year''': 1983
 
* '''Editor''': [[Claire Zion]]
 
* '''Editor''': [[Claire Zion]]
 
* '''Amazon Listing''' : []
 
* '''Amazon Listing''' : []
 +
 +
== Book Description ==
 +
Apache Tears--that was the name of the gemlike stones beautiful young Catriona Frazer mounted in the exquisite jewelry she fashioned. She went to the Indian reservation, leaving behind the secure world of her established life, to learn from the famous Navajo silversmith Adam Hawk the secrets of his art... and he taught her. Cat melted with desire under the white heat of his gaze, and his loving hands molded her, as if she were precious metal, into the form of his passion. But Adam was a man of a different culture, one that forbade their love. Was the bond that drew them together strong enough to withstand the forces that threatened to drive them apart?
  
 
== Recognitions ==  
 
== Recognitions ==  
 
* [[1984 Golden Medallion Winners & Finalists|1984 Golden Medallion Finalist]] for [[RITA®: Contemporary Romance Categories|Contemporary Romance Under 65,000 Words]]
 
* [[1984 Golden Medallion Winners & Finalists|1984 Golden Medallion Finalist]] for [[RITA®: Contemporary Romance Categories|Contemporary Romance Under 65,000 Words]]

Revision as of 13:00, 26 July 2021

Book Description

Apache Tears--that was the name of the gemlike stones beautiful young Catriona Frazer mounted in the exquisite jewelry she fashioned. She went to the Indian reservation, leaving behind the secure world of her established life, to learn from the famous Navajo silversmith Adam Hawk the secrets of his art... and he taught her. Cat melted with desire under the white heat of his gaze, and his loving hands molded her, as if she were precious metal, into the form of his passion. But Adam was a man of a different culture, one that forbade their love. Was the bond that drew them together strong enough to withstand the forces that threatened to drive them apart?

Recognitions