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3 Stars / Contemporary / Review

Review: A Cowboy and a Promise by Pam Crooks

Her determination fuels his desire

When her dying friend pleads for help to finish a renovation project, Ava Howell canā€™t refuse, even though her promise means leaving her new career and familiar life in New York to travel to a remote ranch in Texas. Sheā€™s good at what she does, and the ghost town vacation resort would look great on her resume, but it means tangling with the ex-military cowboy who is determined to stop her as soon as she arrives.

Beau Paxton needs to sell the land and ghost town to save his familyā€™s struggling ranch. Heā€™s a formidable enemy to Avaā€™s determination, but the harder she works, the more his attraction for her grows. He doesnā€™t want to set aside his plans so she can succeed at hers, yet he finds himself doing just that…

Will a promise bring a city girl and a sexy cowboy together? Or will a broken one drive them apart?

Title:A Cowboy and a Promise
Author:Pam Crooks
Series:Blackstone Ranch (Book 1)
Pages:240
Category / Genre(s):Contemporary
Trope(s):Cowboy Romance
Fish Out of Water
Opposites Attract
Point of View:
Location:Texas, US
HEA:āœ”ļø
Release Date:24th January, 2019
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A short and sweet read

I always enjoy a cowboy romance – especially an opposites attract. Here we have city-girl Ava coming down to Texas and sparring with rough and tumble cowboy, Beau. What gave it a little extra in this department was that Ava, while liking her city comforts, was very much an independent, well-rounded kinda girl who didnā€™t let country life phase her. Itā€™s nice to see a familiar trope without the usual cliches.

Speaking of the characters – I very much enjoyed Ava. As I said, she was smart, sharp and sassy. Making it in the male-dominated world of architectural construction (or something like that!) but still coming across as vulnerable and very real – I could see myself being friends with her. When she was annoyed at Beau and giving him the silent treatment – but couldnā€™t stop being polite to him even if she growled it through clenched teeth; these little things made me root for her while also laugh at how likely it all was.

Beau was your typical cowboy – but thatā€™s hardly a complaint from me. He wanted what he wanted – liked what he liked – and those traits made me like him. However, I felt that I only really got glimpses of his personality and his soul. I would have liked more of him.

“Itā€™s nice to see a familiar trope without the usual cliches.”

Another reviewer put it perfectly when she said that the love declaration was a little abrupt. It surprised me so much that I actually scrolled back to see if Iā€™d missed a few chapters. Up until that moment Ava and Beau seemed to only have spent minimal time together and had barely a few kisses. While I enjoy sex in my romance novels, itā€™s by no means something that I require in order to enjoy a story. Unfortunately, for this book, I felt that it was an element that was definitely missing. It needed something else – be it romance or sex – just to lift this to the next level for me. To make me truly believe.

Avaā€™s trip to Texas all comes about due to her friendā€™s death bed request. A death bed request that we hear about right at the start of the novel. That was a rough way to start a book and I debated giving up right there and then. It just hit too close to the bone to immediately read the death of a 20-something from cancer.

And I also didnā€™t see the need for the Donnie storyline in the book. It takes up only a little time in but I would have preferred to read about Ava and Beau rather than a random kid. Presumably his own journey will continue in other books but I would have been happy enough if those elements werenā€™t included.

The ending was cute as a button and overall I easily sped through this fairly short book (I would guess at about 225 pages as I canā€™t seem to find an official page count while writing this review). It didnā€™t hit all the marks for me but was a pleasant way to pass a few hours. 3 stars for a cute cowboy and city girl gone country.

Dear Reader,

While expecting my first child (more years back than I care to count), I read my very first romance novel, and I’ve been in love with them ever since. I grew up in the ranch country of western Nebraska, and it was inevitable Iā€™d eventually write lots of books about cowboys. I still live in Nebraska with my husband (who is not a cowboy), four married daughters and a whole slew of perfect grandchildren.

I’m a long-time member of RWA and RAH, my local chapter. I’m also one of the founders of Petticoats & Pistols, a popular blogsite for western romance. I love to cook, hang out at my lake cabin, and decorate birthday cakes for anyone who will let me.

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Blackstone Ranch Series:

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