REVIEW: A Cowboy’s Pride by Pamela Britton

Posted June 20th, 2013 by in American, Blog, Harlequin Mills&Boon, Review / 0 comments

In A Cowboy’s Pride by Pamela Britton, Trent Anderson believes that his rodeo days are over. In an unfortunate car accident he not only lost his ability to walk but also his rodeo partner and best friend. No matter how much therapy they put him through he doesn’t believe that he will be able to get back to his old life.

ACPAlana McClintock is a physical therapist working on a ranch specializing at helping handicapped people. She lost her fiancée in a car accident that also took her sister-in-law’s life and left her almost niece disabled but Rana’s disability is what pushed Alana to finish her degree as a physical therapist.

Now as Trent is forced by his mother and best friend to go to the ranch and give it chance, Alana will face one of her biggest challenges with Trent. Trent is surly and uncooperative, he doesn’t want to be there and he won’t comply to the therapy easily. But his attraction to Alana will have him rising to her challenges each and every time.

Things will not be as easy though, for first they must face the truth behind Trent’s disability, which is not based on a physical problem but a mental one. And unless Trent faces the truth, he will not believe that he can be able to ride again. But he is not the only one hiding from something inside his mind, and unless Alana faces her own problems which keep her on the ranch at all times, she may just loose her second chance at love.

For a sweet romance with two hardheaded and stubborn main characters who will not give up on each other until they get what they want, A Cowboy’s Pride by Pamela Britton will not let you down.

 

Book Info

Harlequin JunkiePublication Date: June 4, 2013 | Series: Harlequin American Romance (Book 1453)
Broken Cowboy…Trent Anderson’s rodeo days are over. Thanks to the car accident that killed his best friend, he will never get on a horse again. But physical therapist Alana McClintock isn’t listening to his protestations. She just won’t let up—getting under his skin, waking parts of him he thought would sleep forever. He can sense she feels something for him, too.

Alana knows Trent’s injuries aren’t as extensive as he thinks, and with some hard work she’s convinced he will ride again. But the problem is convincing Trent. As Alana works with the wounded cowboy, she is drawn to him in a way that is anything but professional. She’s determined to help him, though—even if it means he’ll walk away from her.

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