by Sarah McCarty
8/2 - Tucker's Claim is just not clicking for me like Caine's Reckoning and Sam's Creed did. I don't like the language Sally Mae uses, ostensibly because she's a Quaker. I have no idea how Quaker's talk now, let alone 150 years ago, but I can't stand the constant thys, thees, and thous. It's really ...
Don't get me wrong for the 4 stars... I liked this book, but Tucker's "tastes" in sex a little bit extreme for me... *blush*I would have liked it better with a softer side of their sexual games. In the previous books there's also some rough sex, but it is not so DSM as here. I'm not judging, but for...
As mentioned before, stories of the West grab by attention, if they "...lend credence to the Gold Rush, railroad expansion and lawlessness, while also displaying a melting pot, very unlike the cities the the Midwest and the East, but no less significant". “Hell's Eight” saga continues with Tucker's...
I love a bok that tells such a good story in the first person
Wow Tucker was a dirty boy! Not in a bad way, mind you, but once Sallie Mae chose him, he sure started in on her with the kinky stuff. I'm not going to be naive and think that anal sex just started recently, lol, so I guess it must have been at least known even in the 1800s. I think what surprised m...
This was a good solid read, but there were so many scenes that had me wondering if she picked the wrong sort of heroine. This is supposed to be the wild west. Sally Mae is a Quaker widow, speaking with the thee's and thou's. She's known Tucker for awhile and been attracated to him. Okay that's f...
Slow to start but not too bad. Sweet love story. Nothing to blow me away with in the book but still liked it. Something about McCarty's writing keeps me reading her books. None if them really stick with me but I keep reading her works.