I'm reading this series at the moment and loving it... I have read the first three books quite a few times and now started from book again. I can't wait until I get to book four. If you are looking for some bloody good stories to read, then in my humble opinion this is the series for you. I love how the inter connect but are each their own story. I honestly hope many more books are written in this series.
BLURBS:
Crooked Tree Ranch
When
a cowboy, meets the guy from the city, he can't know how much things will
change.
On the spur of the moment, with
his life collapsing around him, Jay Sullivan answers an ad for a business
manager with an expertise in marketing, on a dude ranch in Montana.
With his sister, Ashley, niece,
Kirsten and nephew, Josh, in tow, he moves lock stock and barrel from New York
to Montana to start a new life on Crooked Tree Ranch.
Foreman and part owner of the
ranch, ex rodeo star Nathaniel 'Nate' Todd has been running the dude ranch, for
five years ever since his mentor Marcus Allen became ill.
His brothers convince him that he
needs to get an expert in to help the business grow. He knows things have to
change and but when the new guy turns up, with a troubled family in tow - he
just isn't prepared for how much.
NB: This is a previously released
title. It includes a new chapter and is re-edited with new cover art.
The Rancher's Son
A man without memories, and the
cop who never gave up hope.
When he wakes up in the hospital,
the victim of a brutal beating, John Doe has no memories of who he is or who
hurt him. The cops can find nothing to identify him and he can't remember
anything to help... except the name Ethan and one recurring place from his
dreams. Two words, and they're not much, but it's a start: Crooked Tree.
Detective Ethan Allens has never
stopped searching for the two boys who vanished. When a report lands on Ethan's
desk that may give new leads, he jumps at the chance to follow them up. The man
he finds isn't his brother, but it's someone who could maybe help him discover
what happened twelve years ago.
What neither man can know is that
facing the very real demons of the past could destroy any kind of future they
may have together.
A Cowboy's Home
One burned and broken man finds
his way home. Can he find peace in the arms of a man easy to love?
Justin made the ultimate
sacrifice for his country, battling domestic terrorism, never the man he really
was, using hate to avenge the death of his best friend. The friend he'd killed.
What he doesn’t count on is
getting shot, and if he's going to die he wants it to be on Crooked Tree soil.
Home.
Sam is as much a part of Crooked
Tree as any of the families, and the offer to buy into the ranch is a dream
come true. But falling for a hidden, secretive, injured man isn’t the way to
keep his head in the game.
Snow In Montana
An actor in the closet, a sheriff
in love, and memories that won’t stay hidden.
Jordan Darby is known as the King
of Christmas. The star of eight made-for-TV Christmas movies, the leading man
who always gets his girl. Filming at Crooked Tree Ranch in Montana, in the ice
and snow, Jordan is fighting to make a go of his new company and dealing with
fears of exposure over one huge secret. After all, who the hell would buy into him
being a romantic straight lead if rumors about him being gay were proven to be
true?
Sheriff Ryan Carter is advising
on the new movie being made at Crooked Tree. He hoped this would be one day of
work and nothing more. Until, that is, he meets the hero. But while Jordan is
sexy, he’s also very much stuck in the closet—everything that Ryan doesn’t need
in his life. And then lust becomes part of the equation, and Ryan’s quiet life
is thrown into turmoil.
Their story unfolds against the
chaos that overtakes the ranch, with Adam regaining memories that terrify him
and make him look at Justin differently, and Justin leaving the ranch to make
things right. Only through trusting in love and friendship can Justin and Adam
learn to look to the future instead of letting the past destroy everything. But
will they ever see clearly enough to do that?
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