Book Review: Love Me, Cowgirl by Eve Gaddy

love-me-cowgirlA reverse gender cowboy story, “Love Me, Cowgirl ” puts the onus on the man to keep the romance going while the woman is the one who is actually trying to escape. Written with two POVs, the hero and the heroine, this novella is a joy to read with many laugh out loud moments. Still, there are also some heartbreaking moments that will tug at your heartstrings.

Though both Dr. Sean Gallagher and Honey Jordan are both Marietta natives, both of them do not live in their hometown permanently for some time. For Sean, medical school and a medical practice out of state is the reason while for Honey, her barrel racing career only allows her to stay in Marietta about two weeks out of the year.

While Sean has moved back permanently, Honey was still a vagabond. And that is the crux of the matter with their relationship. Sean was ready to put on roots but Honey was still in her rolling stone phase. As their relationship grows from lust to love, Sean and Honey find themselves at an impasse. And for them to reach their happily ever after, both have to accept things about themselves that they have been hiding from for a long time.

Love Me, Cowgirl (The 78th Copper Mountain Rodeo Book 4) is Rated M for Mature due to sexual content.

5
 
Description

Disillusioned with love, Dr. Sean Gallagher returns to Marietta to join its expanding medical facility. Marietta’s newest, most eligible bachelor isn’t looking for long-term involvement – especially not with his brother’s much-younger former girlfriend, Honey Jordan. But short term? That’s another matter.

Escaping a toxic relationship with her father, barrel racer Honey spends as little time as possible in Marietta. Home for the 78th Annual Copper Mountain Rodeo, a brief fling with the town’s hottest new doc might be just the thing to distract her until she can leave again.

But when a riding accident strands Honey in Marietta, an affair meant to last a few nights turns into something much deeper, leaving both Sean and Honey torn between the safety of saying goodbye and the heartache of losing what they dare not admit they’ve found — one true and lasting love.