SANDRA BROWN, as ERIN ST. CLAIRE
Stats: Mass market paperback, Silhouette, 1993
How acquired: Bought.
First line: The refrigerator door was open, projecting a pale, blue-white wedge of light into the dark kitchen.
(Goodreads synopsis below.)
My thoughts: Ms. Brown has come a long way since writing this drivel. Oh, the writing is decent enough. But the story.
First off, when I read the back cover synopsis, I thought this was going to be an historical romance. I mean, Indian (in the days before the term Native American was the norm) kidnaps white woman and takes her to his reservation. But then the first line of the first chapter talks about a refrigerator door being open, and I was a little jolted. Lucas constantly says things like "I'm sure an Anglo virgin like you can't imagine anything worse than having an Indian between her lily white thighs" and "...you'd want to die before having your pure Anglo body tainted by an Indian", and so on and so on, me big bad Indian, you rich white privileged Anglo woman. Was there really so much prejudice and racism towards Native Americans in 1986? I don't remember that, nor do I remember ever actually hearing a white person referred to as an Anglo. But then, I was only twenty-three then and living in my own little world. I do remember hearing stories of the racism my half Choctaw grandmother experienced when she was young - how she and her siblings had to go to another town for school because the whites didn't want them at the local school and the Indians didn't want them at the Indian school - but that would have been in the 30's/40's.
Then when Lucas discovered Aislynn had given
birth to his baby while he was in prison there was the whole I'm
taking my son to live on the reservation with me cuz I won't have him
brought up in the Anglo world and you either marry me and come along
or say goodbye to your son. I like the marriage of convenience trope,
and I even often like the forced marriage trope, but this one left
bad taste in my mouth.
Of course everything comes out
roses in the end, but it wasn't always a pleasant journey getting
there.
Synopsis from Goodreads:
Lucas Greywolf was her forbidden fantasy, wild, rebellious, a Navajo -- and an escaped convict. Aislinn had been terrified when he first grabbed her, but now she was intrigued. Why had he taken her hostage -- and where were they heading?
Every moment of their mad dash across Arizona drew Aislinn closer to this unyielding man who seemed to drive himself beyond human limits. And they they reached his reservation, and Aislinn learned why they had come....
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