

Oh and I might have missed something but the opening chapter says Kansas Territory 1859 and then later in chapter four it's called the Colorado Territory. Also what the hell is a cold navy revolver? Colt navy yes, so maybe it's a typo. I'm also pretty sure that if one needed to buy a hammer, he'd buy it at the general store/mercantile not the carpenters. Hannah got a dog that was a Labrador.umm pretty sure they weren't called Labradors in 1859, since they weren't an American breed until the early 1900's. Some examples.Nathan actually said, "hell to the no." This 1859 people. I am not a nitpick when I read stories, but it should hold some sort of realism and historical accuracy. I also had issues with some of the historical inaccuracies. The dialogue was stunted and amateurish and didn't convey to me any realism.

This is the first book in The Colorado Brides Series, chronicling the lives of the Hoffman sisters and their adventures in finding love out west. One should never judge a book by its cover, and Nathan, although rough around the edges and crude, has his heart in the right place, and it belongs to Hannah…if only she could see it. While the tenuous hold she has on her sanity crumbles, her connection with Nathan becomes something far greater than she could have ever imagined, but her family would be scandalized if she married such a man. Once widowed, she struggles to cope with her loss, relying on those her husband had hired, especially Nathan Weaver, a no good gambler and drunkard.

After an accident leaves Frank without feeling in his legs, the dream of self-sufficiency suddenly slips away, but even more tragedy is on the horizon for Hannah. After arriving by wagon to the howling wilderness of the unexplored west, they settled on land, built a home, and began what they thought would be a long and prosperous life together. Hannah Hoffman Clark is the spirited young wife of Denver City’s only preacher, Frank Clark.
