Difference between revisions of "Midnight Fire"
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− | [[Category: Native American - Historical]][[Category: Western]] | + | [[Category:1992 Releases]][[Category:Native American - Historical]][[Category:Western]] |
* '''Author''': [[Madeline Baker]] | * '''Author''': [[Madeline Baker]] | ||
* '''Publisher''': [[Leisure]] | * '''Publisher''': [[Leisure]] | ||
* '''Year''': 1992 | * '''Year''': 1992 | ||
+ | ==Book Description== | ||
He was a hard-riding, hard-drinking drifter, a half-breed who had no use for a frightened white girl fleeing an unwanted wedding. He told himself he needed only the money she offered to guide her across the plains, but half-way between Galveston and Ogallala, where the burning prairie met the endless night sky, he made her his woman. Now she was his to protect, his to cherish, and he would allow no man --- white or Indian --- to come between them. There in the vast wilderness where his desire had ignited hers, he swore to change his life path, to fulfill the challenge of his vision quest, if only he could keep her love. | He was a hard-riding, hard-drinking drifter, a half-breed who had no use for a frightened white girl fleeing an unwanted wedding. He told himself he needed only the money she offered to guide her across the plains, but half-way between Galveston and Ogallala, where the burning prairie met the endless night sky, he made her his woman. Now she was his to protect, his to cherish, and he would allow no man --- white or Indian --- to come between them. There in the vast wilderness where his desire had ignited hers, he swore to change his life path, to fulfill the challenge of his vision quest, if only he could keep her love. |
Latest revision as of 02:57, 14 October 2007
- Author: Madeline Baker
- Publisher: Leisure
- Year: 1992
Book Description
He was a hard-riding, hard-drinking drifter, a half-breed who had no use for a frightened white girl fleeing an unwanted wedding. He told himself he needed only the money she offered to guide her across the plains, but half-way between Galveston and Ogallala, where the burning prairie met the endless night sky, he made her his woman. Now she was his to protect, his to cherish, and he would allow no man --- white or Indian --- to come between them. There in the vast wilderness where his desire had ignited hers, he swore to change his life path, to fulfill the challenge of his vision quest, if only he could keep her love.