Helpful Score: 2
What a wonderful story about the true meaning of "family". Four young boys find a baby in the trash in New York City so they decide to head west and raise her to be a "proper" young lady. The underlying love throughout this book is a wonderful change of pace. It just goes to show you that you don't have to be blood related to have a family. I recommend this book highly.
Helpful Score: 2
I really want to like her books but I am just not that big a Julie Garwood fan. I keep ordering her books hoping one of them will prove why she has so many fans, but other than "Killjoy", I just don't understand the fuss. Her period novels, like "For The Roses" and "Ransom", are always written in an overly simplistic, doe-eyed innocent manner that simply doesn't jive with the storyline. She over-uses phrases such as "S/He really was [insert strange and unnecessary adjective here] and overall, this book reads very awkwardly. The plots are usually very interesting but the execution is just so-so.
As for this particular book, it's a great story about tolerance and different definitions for family.
As for this particular book, it's a great story about tolerance and different definitions for family.
Very sweet.
This is part of the trilogy and it is was very good series. I couldn't wait to start on the next book as soon as I finished the one preceding it. It is worth the read
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this lovely story ... it was like visiting an old friend, wanting to return again and again. Can't wait to read the rest of this trilogy
A touching story of love, loyalty, and secrets kept in a family and in the hearts. A wonderful read!
I really loved this book!It's worth reading!
Another great Julie Garwood book!
Excellent Julie Garwood. Quality romantic fiction.
No one ever knew what kind of strays, from animals to weary travelers, Mary Rose Clayborne would bring home next. Sometimes her four brothers? runaway slave Adam, ax-pickpocket Douglas, gunslinger Cole, and con man Travis -- wondered whether her boarding school education did a lick of good now that their beautiful, impulsive little sister was back in Blue Belle, Montana.
Of course, everyone in town knew better than to mess with the Claybornes. The brothers, four of the toughest hombres in the West, had once been a mismatched gang of street urchins. But they had found an abandoned baby girl in a New York City alley, named her Mary Rose, headed West, and raised her to be a lady. Through the years the Claybornes had become a family, held together by loyalty and love if not by blood -- when they suddenly faced the crisis that could tear them apart.
That crisis came to town with Lord Harrison Stanford MacDonald. In his fine clothes, he looked every inch a dude. Mary Rose figured that if she didn't interfere, this handsome Englishman would get himself killed, so she took him home to the Clayborne ranch to ask her brothers to turn him into a cowboy. She didn't suspect MacDonald was a chameleon, not the greenhorn he appeared to be. He'd prove fast with a gun, quick with his fists, and capable of commanding the Claybornes's respect -- if not their trust. He'd also soon be desperately in love with Mary Rose. She returned his affection blissfully and wholeheartedly...until MacDonald revealed a secret that challenged everything she believed about her love, herself, and her life.
Now Mary Rose's search for identity and meaning would begin, sending her to England, to the family she lost long ago. Her soul hungered for the freedom of the American West, but she was being drawn away from all she cared about by the need to know her past...and by her uncertain but still potent love for MacDonald. Torn between conflicting loyalties, Mary Rose wasn't sure who she really was, or where she belonged...questions that could only be answered if she listened to the truth within her heart.
Of course, everyone in town knew better than to mess with the Claybornes. The brothers, four of the toughest hombres in the West, had once been a mismatched gang of street urchins. But they had found an abandoned baby girl in a New York City alley, named her Mary Rose, headed West, and raised her to be a lady. Through the years the Claybornes had become a family, held together by loyalty and love if not by blood -- when they suddenly faced the crisis that could tear them apart.
That crisis came to town with Lord Harrison Stanford MacDonald. In his fine clothes, he looked every inch a dude. Mary Rose figured that if she didn't interfere, this handsome Englishman would get himself killed, so she took him home to the Clayborne ranch to ask her brothers to turn him into a cowboy. She didn't suspect MacDonald was a chameleon, not the greenhorn he appeared to be. He'd prove fast with a gun, quick with his fists, and capable of commanding the Claybornes's respect -- if not their trust. He'd also soon be desperately in love with Mary Rose. She returned his affection blissfully and wholeheartedly...until MacDonald revealed a secret that challenged everything she believed about her love, herself, and her life.
Now Mary Rose's search for identity and meaning would begin, sending her to England, to the family she lost long ago. Her soul hungered for the freedom of the American West, but she was being drawn away from all she cared about by the need to know her past...and by her uncertain but still potent love for MacDonald. Torn between conflicting loyalties, Mary Rose wasn't sure who she really was, or where she belonged...questions that could only be answered if she listened to the truth within her heart.
I really enjoyed this book. I love Julie Garwood and have all of her books. This book replaced one I had a few years ago that was lost, and I was anxious to re-read it and the follow-up Claybourne Brides books. The story is lively and very entertaining.
Loved the story. Julie Garwood is a favorite of mine. Love her humor.:-)
This is a re-read of a book I thoroughly enjoyed when it originally was published. The author had plenty of room to develop each of the main (family member) characters, but Travis and Douglas are significantly less well-rounded than the other brothers. The book is a whopping 500 pages, which I thought was a bit long. To be fair, the story takes place in New York City, Montana and England.
When four hellions of New York City find a baby girl thrown away in the trash in an alley, they decide that they must take care of Mary Rose. They decide to take her west and raise her to be a lady. During the course of the story, the reader learns how Mary Rose sealed the unity between the four 'brothers' to create a family. Becoming Mary Rose's family caused each brother to become a better person than he would have become otherwise. An interesting and unique story. The pages fly by.
Claybornes' Brides (Rose Hill)
**1. For the Roses (1995)
2. One Pink Rose (1997)
3. One White Rose (1997)
4. One Red Rose (1997)
5. Come the Spring (1997)
When four hellions of New York City find a baby girl thrown away in the trash in an alley, they decide that they must take care of Mary Rose. They decide to take her west and raise her to be a lady. During the course of the story, the reader learns how Mary Rose sealed the unity between the four 'brothers' to create a family. Becoming Mary Rose's family caused each brother to become a better person than he would have become otherwise. An interesting and unique story. The pages fly by.
Claybornes' Brides (Rose Hill)
**1. For the Roses (1995)
2. One Pink Rose (1997)
3. One White Rose (1997)
4. One Red Rose (1997)
5. Come the Spring (1997)
Of course everyone in town knew better than to mess with th Claybornes. The brothers, four of the toughest hombres in the West, had once been a mismatched gang of street urchins. But they found an abandoned baby girl in New York City alley, named her Mary rOSE, HEADED wEST AND RAISED HER TO BE A LADY. Through the years the Claybornes had become a family, held together by loyalty and love if not by blood-when they suddenly faced the crisis that could tear them apart.