Colorado Hope Blog Tour
About the Author
Charlene Whitman spent many years living on
Colorado's Front Range. She grew up riding and raising horses, and loves to
read, write, and hike the mountains. She attended Colorado State University in
Fort Collins as an English major. She has two daughters and is married to
George "Dix" Whitman, her love of thirty years. Colorado Hope is the
second sweet Historical Western Romance novel in her Front Range series.
Her latest book is the sweet western historical
romance, Colorado
Hope.
1875 ~
Beset by a sudden spring storm on the Front Range, newlywed Grace Cunningham
watches in horror as her husband, Monty, is swept downriver. Pregnant and
despairing, she stumbles into Fort Collins and tries to make a life for
herself, praying that one day the man she loves will walk into town and back
into her life.
A year
after Grace’s tragic loss, Monty enters the dress shop where she works—with a
beautiful woman on his arm. Shocked that he has no recollection of her, Grace
is determined to win back his heart. Somehow she must help him regain his
memories and his buried love for her—and not just for her sake but for the sake
of their infant son, Ben.
Monty,
miserable in his marriage to a woman he hardly knows, is inexplicably drawn to Grace.
Every time he’s near her, memories surface, but they are hazy and troubling.
He’s torn between his vows and the desires of his heart, for he cannot stay
away from Grace.
Grace’s
hope is sparked when Monty starts recalling glimpses of his past. But when
murderous outlaws come to town, she is thrust into grave danger. Monty risks
his life to rescue her, only to face even greater perils in the treacherous
mountains. Can she truly hang on to hope when she is about to lose all she
loves?
For More Information
- Colorado Hope is available at Amazon.
- Pick up your copy at Barnes & Noble.
- Discuss this book at PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
Title: Colorado Hope
Author: Charlene Whitman
Publisher: Ubiquitous Press
Pages: 412
Genre: Sweet Western Historical Romance
Format: Kindle
Purchase at AMAZONAuthor: Charlene Whitman
Publisher: Ubiquitous Press
Pages: 412
Genre: Sweet Western Historical Romance
Format: Kindle
1875 ~
Beset by a sudden spring storm on the Front Range, newlywed Grace Cunningham
watches in horror as her husband, Monty, is swept downriver. Pregnant and
despairing, she stumbles into Fort Collins and tries to make a life for
herself, praying that one day the man she loves will walk into town and back into
her life.
A year
after Grace’s tragic loss, Monty enters the dress shop where she works—with a
beautiful woman on his arm. Shocked that he has no recollection of her, Grace
is determined to win back his heart. Somehow she must help him regain his memories
and his buried love for her—and not just for her sake but for the sake of their
infant son, Ben.
Monty,
miserable in his marriage to a woman he hardly knows, is inexplicably drawn to
Grace. Every time he’s near her, memories surface, but they are hazy and
troubling. He’s torn between his vows and the desires of his heart, for he
cannot stay away from Grace.
Grace’s
hope is sparked when Monty starts recalling glimpses of his past. But when
murderous outlaws come to town, she is thrust into grave danger. Monty risks
his life to rescue her, only to face even greater perils in the treacherous
mountains. Can she truly hang on to hope when she is about to lose all she
loves?
Book Excerpt:
May
16, 1875
A
fierce wind whipped Grace Ann Cunningham’s hair, yanking at the long strands
and pulling them free from their pins. She squinted through the haze of the
blustery day and stroked her bulging belly, trying to comfort her baby, who
seemed just as agitated by the sudden storm.
Her
back ached from sitting on the hard buckboard bench all these miles—much less
comfortable than the plush sleeper car they’d enjoyed last week on the train
from Illinois to Cheyenne.
She
frowned at the dark roiling clouds that had moved in and quickly blotted out
the sun.
What
had been a pleasant uneventful morning was now turning into an ominous and
unsettling afternoon on the open prairie.
Grace
sucked in a breath as the baby again kicked her ribs in protest. Her sweet
husband’s sun-browned face tightened in concern as he caught her gesture. He
pulled on the reins of the two draft horses—sturdy ones they’d bought yesterday
in Cheyenne. Surefooted, the seller had told them. And Monty knew his horses,
so she trusted his purchase and assurance that they’d
haul
them without incident to Fort Collins. But looking at her husband’s face now,
seeing the subtle telltale signs indicating that he hadn’t expected this squall
nor felt at ease about it, gave her pause. And her normally talkative husband
had been too quiet this last hour, eyeing the sky and listening to the roar of
the nearby river, as if hearing their complaints and trying to suss out
nature’s
intentions.
“The
baby all right, darlin’?” He scooted over on the buckboard seat to look her
over, then took her hands in his.
Warmth
from his gentle grip comforted her, but not as much as the love streaming from
his adoring gaze.
“I
think so,” she told him, then smiled as he laid his hand firmly on her belly.
Grace
thanked the Lord in a silent prayer for this wonderful man who’d married her in
a simple ceremony last September. All those years she’d lived with her doting
aunt Eloisa in the boardinghouse back in Bloomington, she never imagined she’d
be blessed with such happiness.
When
Montgomery Cunningham had first stepped into the parlor to take a room before
starting college at Wesleyan University, she’d been a shy, giggling girl of
ten. Neither of them foresawthe love that would spark six years later when he
showed up again unexpectedly, about to head west to explore and survey lands
unknown.
Monty
closed his eyes, his hand still on the baby in her womb. She imagined him
communing with their baby, speaking to it the way he spoke to rivers, to trees,
to the land he traversed by boat and on horseback and on foot. Something had
happened to him when he returned from the Hayden Yellowstone Expedition. He had
changed from boy to man, yes—but it was more than that. He had fallen in love
with the West, and with rivers in particular. Although he’d studied geology in
college with John Powell, water captured his heart, and he sought out trips
that had him navigating whitewater. Nothing made his eyes sparkle more than
talking about the way water moved and sang as it cascaded and carved the face
of mountains and spilled into waiting valleys. Well, except the way he looked
at her.
Monty
may have loved rivers, but Grace knew he loved her more. So much more, for he
gladly gave up his exploring to settle down and marry and start a family.
Although, Grace thought moving to the new town of Fort Collins, Colorado, was
adventure enough. She hoped he’d come to see it that way as well and not be into
the wild.
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