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Color of the Wind
Color of the Wind
Author: Elizabeth Grayson
Let the acclaimed Elizabeth Grayson touch your heart as only she can...with a poignant, passionate story of a woman's sacred promise and a man's search for himself amid the dangerous splendor of the West. — A deathbed request... — To honor the promise she gave her dying stepsister, Ardith Merritt must take her niece and nephews to their father--a ...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780553580105
ISBN-10: 0553580108
Publication Date: 5/4/1999
Pages: 432
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 13

3.9 stars, based on 13 ratings
Publisher: Bantam
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

strlady avatar reviewed Color of the Wind on + 3 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Excellent book! Grayson has great talent painting the scenes in this books. Not a rushed romance but one that you see the feelings grow from animosity to friendship to love.
usdebby55 avatar reviewed Color of the Wind on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I enjoyed this book . It had a believible story line .About a womans deathbed request to her sister asking her to take her children to their somewhat wayward father to raise so they would live with at least one parent. Her death had occured unexpectedly while she and her children were visiting her sister. This is a story of family and the problems that can happen in relationships. Like Sibling rivalry that can carry into adaulthood.playing a part of who we beome. and learning how to grow and over come them. There are passonate feelings in this book along with romantic love. This book kept my interest with the charactors daily life on a Ranch in Whyoming.And finding change and happiness can be good.
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jjares avatar reviewed Color of the Wind on + 3413 more book reviews
Ardith Merritt, living in Boston, has a comfortable life as a children's book illustrator. However, her dying sister asks Ardith to take her 3 children to their father in Wyoming. Baird Northcross is in Wyoming Territory because he is such a disappointment to his esteemed family.

Running the family ranch, Sugar Creek, is Bairds last ditch effort at redemption. However, little in Bairds education or experience has prepared him for such a task. Baird has been a vagabond and adventurer, not an accountable ranch manager. Over the years, he has left his wife at home to bear and raise their kids alone.

Ardith and Baird have a shared past; her plan is to deposit the children with Baird and return to her life (and get away from Baird as quickly as possible). Baird is shocked by his wifes death and the thought of taking care of his children. Hes also shocked by the change in Ardith.

Baird begs Ardith to stay a while, giving him time to learn to cope with the children. She learns that he has to show a profit on the ranch or suffer the consequences (ostracization and further shame from the family). She reluctantly agrees to stay for a time.

Neither of these characters is very engaging at the outset. Of the two, Ardith seems more mature but she seems anxious and wound tight. Baird is just hopeless obnoxious, rootless, fairly unlikable.

Ive thought about this book for a couple of months before writing this because I wanted to consider the relationship between Ardith and Baird at length. Baird is almost an anti-hero he really needs the steadiness of Ardith. This is not something Im used to seeing in this genre.

Baird never will be a standalone kind of guy. I dont mean this unkindly; there are some people who need the support of a loving partner to reach their potential. With Ardith, Baird grows as a person. Together, they each reach a higher level than they might have as individuals.


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