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Summary
Summary
Taking a job as nurse to the local town doctor, newcomer April Asbury attracts the attention of Joe Jones, whose family is disrupted by an unstable widow's claims about the paternity of Joe's youngest sister. By the author of Hope's Highway. Original.
Author Notes
Dorothy Garlock is a Texas native living in Clear Lake, Iowa, who quit her job as a newspaper columnist and reporter at the age of 49 to write novels. She entered her first novel in a contest and lost, but she sold the book. Now, over twenty years later, she has millions of copies in print and has had her work translated into 18 languages.
So many of her more than 40 books are set in the Old West that Dorothy Garlock has come to be classified as a Western Romance writer. She is a member of the Romance Writers Hall of Fame. Popular titles include Almost Eden, The Listening Sky, and Larkspur. With Hope is a gritty, unsentimental romance set in the Great Depression.
Dorothy Garlock also writes under the names Dorothy Glenn, Dorothy Philips and Johanna Phillips.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (2)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Set in Depression-era Missouri, Garlock?s latest novel picks up where The Edge of Town left off, once again presenting the down-home charm and familiar characters that have made her books so popular. April Asbury, a lovely young nurse, has just arrived in town when her car breaks down and she meets Joe Jones, a ?natural-born flirt? who offers to help her. April is plucky, pretty and smart, and Joe soon finds himself falling for her, though he struggles to shed his playboy image. Meanwhile, the town doctor, Todd Forbes, wades into troublesome romantic territory when he falls for a woman of color, and Shirley, the wife of the late rapist Ron Poole, goes off the deep end after discovering her husband?s sordid history. When a flood wreaks havoc on the town, things come to a head, and many get their comeuppance. Garlock weaves together the various tales with the down home folksiness she?s known for, which includes plenty of corny similes (?He?s about as reliable as snow on the Fourth of July?) and exclamations such as ?Shucks!? and ?Bullfoot!? Of course, everything works out in the end, and there?s a fair amount of sweaty sex thrown in along the way. But it?s Garlock?s characters that keep bringing readers back, and this book will not disappoint her many existing fans. (May) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Booklist Review
Garlock returns to Fertile, Missouri, 10 years after The Edge of Town (2001), when April Asbury arrives to work as Dr. Forbes' new nurse. Taking a room at Mrs. Poole's house, she feels uneasy, which is only right since the widowed Mrs. Poole and her brother are involved in creepy, secret activities. The attractive young nurse is besieged by admirers and viewed askance by the numerous ladies who have set their hats for the doctor. Garlock does a terrific job of showing the wholesome surface of life in the 1930s, while also depicting the ugly underbelly of the times, particularly in regard to racial issues and sexual mores. Setting the story against the rising of the river into a flood seems contrived, as does an overuse of period slang, but this doesn't detract from the focus on relationships among the many characters. And fans will be delighted to catch up with the growing Jones family, who were also seen in A Place Called Rainwater (2003) and High on a Hill (2002). --Diana Tixier Herald Copyright 2005 Booklist