Goodreads
synopsis: A
summer at his grandparents' South Dakota ranch is not eleven-year-old
Cooper Sullivan's idea of a good time. But things are a bit more
bearable now that he's discovered the neighbor girl, Lil Chance, and
her homemade batting cage. Even horseback riding isn't as awful as
Coop thought it would be. Each year, with Coop's annual summer visit,
their friendship deepens from innocent games to stolen kisses, but
there is one shared experience that will forever haunt them: the
terrifying discovery of a hiker's body.
As the seasons change and the years roll, Lil stays steadfast to her aspiration of becoming a wildlife biologist and protecting her family land, while Coop struggles with his father's demand that he attend law school and join the family firm. Twelve years after they last walked together hand in hand, fate has brought them back to the Black Hills when the people and things they hold most dear need them most.
Coop recently left his fast-paced life as an investigator in New York to take care for his aging grandparents and the ranch he has come to call home. Though the memory of his touch still haunts her, Lil has let nothing stop her dream of opening the Chance Wildlife Refuge, but something ... or someone ... has been keeping a close watch. When small pranks and acts of destruction escalate into the heartless killing of Lil's beloved cougar, recollections of an unsolved murder in these very hills have Coop springing to action to keep Lil safe.
Lil and Coop both know the natural dangers that lurk in the wild landscape of the Black Hills. Now they must work together to unearth a killer of twisted and unnatural instincts who has singled them out as prey.
As the seasons change and the years roll, Lil stays steadfast to her aspiration of becoming a wildlife biologist and protecting her family land, while Coop struggles with his father's demand that he attend law school and join the family firm. Twelve years after they last walked together hand in hand, fate has brought them back to the Black Hills when the people and things they hold most dear need them most.
Coop recently left his fast-paced life as an investigator in New York to take care for his aging grandparents and the ranch he has come to call home. Though the memory of his touch still haunts her, Lil has let nothing stop her dream of opening the Chance Wildlife Refuge, but something ... or someone ... has been keeping a close watch. When small pranks and acts of destruction escalate into the heartless killing of Lil's beloved cougar, recollections of an unsolved murder in these very hills have Coop springing to action to keep Lil safe.
Lil and Coop both know the natural dangers that lurk in the wild landscape of the Black Hills. Now they must work together to unearth a killer of twisted and unnatural instincts who has singled them out as prey.
Stats
for my copy:
Mass market paperback, Jove, 2010.
How
acquired:
Bought.
First
line:
Cooper Sullivan's life, as he'd known it, was over.
My
thoughts:
I've only read two Nora Roberts books before this one, back in 2009
(Brazen Virtue, which I have no memory of now but my notes say “I
really liked it”) and 2010 (Divine Evil, which I vaguely remember,
and noted “I don't think of her as a great writer, I think some of
her writing is cliched.”) Well, I'm here to tell you that Black
Hills has put Ms. Roberts front and center of my radar and made a
believer out of me. I loved this book. Seriously, loved it.
I
loved Lil. I adored Cooper. Childhood sweethearts, lovers as young
college bound adults, short long-distance relationship, breakup.
Twenty years later Lil is still angry at Coop for breaking her heart,
and we get a long ways into the book before Coop gets the chance to
explain himself to Lil. I'd forgiven him long before then. Well, no,
actually, that's not true, because I didn't feel he needed forgiving.
Even not yet knowing the circumstances of the split, I certainly
wasn't putting any blame on either of them. But maybe because it was
inevitable that they would be together by the end of the book. It is
a romance, after all! And from the moment Coop arrived back in town
to help out his grandparents, I just knew he was a good guy, and it
was obvious neither of them ever really got over the other.
Lil
runs a wildlife refuge, and there is a LOT of detail about the refuge
woven into the story. The day to day stuff. Updating the website,
vetting the animals, feeding the animals, cleaning their cages,
educating the public. And a lot of about the land, tracking, Lil's
love of riding the mountainside. It all felt very real, and I've no
doubt Ms. Roberts did a lot of research.
But
there's not just cougars and romance. There's a serial killer in the
hills, and he's got Lil in his sites. When I got down to the last 100
or so pages, my anxiety level kept ratcheting up. I knew something
was going to happen, Lil would be in danger and Cooper would probably
rescue her. But the end of the book kept getting closer and closer,
with me waiting and waiting for it. And when it finally did, I was
sitting up in bed, tired but too tense to sleep until the book was
over.
The
characterization is wonderful, not just Lil and Coop, but Lil's best
friend Tansy, Coops grandparents, Lil's parents, and many others. I
loved the side plot about Tansy and her reservations about a
relationship with the younger Farley. I liked that it was an
interracial relationship, and while that was mentioned it wasn't a
big deal and was accepted by all their family and friends.
Now
I understand why Ms. Roberts is so dang popular!
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