Monday, July 06, 2026

Cherry Creek by Linda Griffin


Cherry Creek
by Linda Griffin

Book Blurb:

When her fiancé died, Eileen said, “Then I’m free,” words that her younger sister Molly didn’t understand and never forgot. In 1850s Ohio, a girl doesn’t have that many options, and marrying Andrew MacLeith may be the best she can hope for. He promises to cherish her, but they have to live with his parents, and he can’t even protect her from his mother’s sharp tongue. After a quarrel, Molly impulsively joins his gambler brother Hugh on a journey to the Pike’s Peak gold region. Perhaps the romance and freedom she longs for lie elsewhere. Or were they right under her nose all along? 

Excerpt:

 “When I get to Pike’s Peak,” he assured me, “I’ll send back more money than this to Ma and Pa and anybody I owe money to. But not to Andrew. He wouldn’t know how to spend it. You would, though, wouldn’t you, Molly?” he teased.  

“Yes,” I said wistfully. My prospects were even more dismal than before. If he ran off to  

Kansas, he wouldn’t return for a long time, if he ever did. I was on the verge of tears again.  

“Hey now, cheer up. Aren’t you glad of my good fortune?”  

“Yes,” I said, although I wasn’t. I was envious.  

“Do you mean to say it’s serious between you and Andrew?” he asked, frowning.  

“I hate living here,” I burst out, as I had to Andrew. Complaining to his brother was wrong, but I was too unhappy to contain myself.  

Hugh was briefly taken aback before he said, with his usual charming insouciance, “Come to Pike’s Peak with me, then.”  

I didn’t think he meant it, and I was only half serious when I said, “I wish I could.” Decamping to Kansas would be an adventure and an escape, and it would teach Andrew a thing or two.  

“Why can’t you?” he asked, making it sound almost logical “If you don’t like it here, what’s 

keeping you? Pike’s Peak is the future, the new Eldorado. Don’t you want a piece of it?”  

“I couldn’t dig for gold,” I said. “And I don’t have any money.”  

“I do,” he said. He fanned out his winnings. “Come on, Molly. It will be fun.”  

Author Bio:


Linda Griffin knew she wanted to be a “book maker” as soon as she learned to read, and she wrote her first story, “Judy and the Fairies,” at the age of six. Her passion for the printed word also led her to a career with the San Diego Public Library. She retired to spend more time on her writing and has had stories published in numerous literary journals. Cherry Creek is her eleventh novel, published by the Wild Rose Press. In addition to the three R’s—reading, writing, and research—she enjoys travel, movies, Scrabble, and visiting museums and art galleries. 

Friday, July 03, 2026

Three Perfect Entry-Point Western Romances by Caroline Clemmons


 A note from Stephanie, Caroline's daughter: 

My mother wrote more than 90 novels. She used to laugh and say she wasn't sure exactly how many there were at any given moment because she was always in the middle of the next one before she'd finished counting the last. 

She is gone now, and I find myself the keeper of her catalog, her website, and the readers she loved so much. One of the questions that comes in most often — and one that she answered cheerfully for years — is this one: Where do I start? 

I want to keep answering it, the way she would have. So this post is my attempt to do exactly that. These are three books that my mother recommended as entry points for new readers — each one opening a beloved series, each one a complete story, and each one a reliable introduction to the kind of Western romance she spent more than 25 years writing. 

She called it "writing love that lasts." I think these three books show you exactly what she meant by that. 

1. Josephine — Bride Brigade, Book 1 

The story: 

Josephine Nailor will do whatever it takes to protect herself and her best friend from the controlling fathers who have made their lives unbearable. When a newspaper advertisement offers the possibility of a new life, the two young women seize it — traveling to Tarnation, Texas, as part of the Bride Brigade, with the help of the warm-hearted Lydia Harrison. 

Josephine is wary of men in power. Her past has given her every reason to be. But in Tarnation she finds herself drawn to Michael Buchanan, the town's mayor and owner of the local mercantile — precisely the kind of man she has spent her life learning not to trust. The question at the heart of this story is whether Josephine can separate the man Michael actually is from the kind of man she fears he might become. 

Why it's a great starting point: 

My mother built the Bride Brigade series around friendship as much as romance, and Josephine establishes both from the very first chapter. You get the warmth of the Tarnation community, the bond between Josephine and her friend, and a romance that grows from genuine conflict rather than simple misunderstanding. The small-town Texas frontier setting is vivid and grounded. 

After Josephine, there are six more Bride Brigade books — each one following a different woman who made the journey to Tarnation, all of them connected by the friendships and community my mother built so carefully in this first book. 

2. Gentry and the Mail Order Bride — Texas Hill Country Mail Order Bride Series, Book 1 

The story: 

Heidi travels to Texas Hill Country to marry the son of family friends, carrying hopes for a secure future and an escape from a troubled past. When she arrives to devastating news — her intended groom has died — she finds herself stranded with no money to return home and nowhere obvious to turn. 

Gentry McRae, her late fiancé's ranch partner, offers a solution: marry him instead. It is a practical arrangement born of tragedy. But practical arrangements have a way of becoming something else entirely when two people are forced to depend on each other. 

Why it's a great starting point: 

This series was set in the Texas Hill Country, a landscape my mother knew and loved. The marriage-of-convenience premise was one of her favorite story structures — she loved the way it created immediate intimacy between two characters who hadn't yet earned each other's trust, and watching that trust build was, for her, one of romance's great pleasures to write. 

The Texas Hill Country series grew to six books, and Gentry and Heidi's story is where it all begins. 

3. Brazos Bride — Men of Stone Mountain, Texas, Book 1 

The story: 

Hope Montoya is a determined heiress who believes someone is trying to poison her. To survive until she comes into her inheritance and escape her uncle's control, she proposes a marriage of convenience to Micah Stone — a rancher whose reputation has been ruined by accusations that he murdered her father. 

Micah has his own reasons to agree. What neither of them expects is that a marriage in name only, forged from mutual necessity, will ask them to face genuine danger, real desire, and a betrayal that threatens everything they're building — before they can find their way to the truth, and to each other. 

Why it's a great starting point: 

My mother loved this book. It has everything she loved about Western historical romance: a heroine who acts rather than waits, a hero working to reclaim a destroyed reputation, and a mystery that keeps the stakes high from the first chapter to the last. The Stone Mountain community is introduced here and deepens across seven books total. 

If you read Brazos Bride and want more, there are six more Men of Stone Mountain books ready and waiting for you. 

A Note From Me 

My mother's complete reading order is still available at carolineclemmons.com/reading-order/, and her books remain available on Amazon. Every single one of them ends with a happy ending — that was a promise she made to her readers from the very beginning, and she kept it across every one of those 90-plus books. 

She would be so glad to know her stories are still finding new readers. That was always the point, for her. Not the word counts or the series numbers or the awards — though she was proud of those too — but the readers. The people who picked up one of her books and felt, for a few hours, that they were somewhere beautiful, rooting for people worth rooting for. 

Wednesday, July 01, 2026

Slapshot Summer by G.K. Brady

 


A jilted bride.

A wrecked goalie.

An unexpected kiss that changes everything.


Slapshot Summer

A The Playmakers Series Novella

by G.K. Brady

Genre: Steamy Fake Dating Hockey Romance

A jilted bride. A wrecked goalie. An unexpected kiss that changes everything.

I came here to reset.

After a season that pushed me to my limits, I needed sun, quiet, and space—somewhere I could shut out the noise and get my head back under control.

Then Lexi Campbell sat beside me at the bar and asked for my help flirting with another guy.

I said yes because it was supposed to be fake. A distraction. Something with clear lines and no consequences. I’m good with pressure. I know how to stay focused, how to hold my ground when everything’s coming at me fast.

What I didn’t expect was how easy it felt to want her.

One kiss blows past every boundary I set. Suddenly, I’m not playing defense anymore—I’m all in, and I don’t know how to pull back. Lexi’s on a honeymoon she’s taking alone, guarding a broken heart she pretends doesn’t still hurt. I’m standing at my own crossroads, unsure where my future leads or if I’m ready to risk wanting something real again.

It was supposed to be a fling. But wanting her is the one thing I can’t seem to control.

For fans of fake dating, opposites attract, and swoony NHL players who actually like to dance, Slapshot Summer is a heartwarming romance with plenty of spice … and, of course, a guaranteed HEA.

**PLEASE NOTE: This story was originally published as Sunsets, Stick Saves, and a Honeymoon in the Love in Destiny Series. The content has not changed. If you’ve read that version, then you've read this one as well.**

 

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Since childhood, all sorts of stories and characters have lived in G.K. Brady’s imagination, elbowing one another for attention, so she’s finally giving them their voice on the written page.

 An award-winning writer of contemporary romance, she loves telling tales of the less-than-perfect hero or heroine who transforms with each turn of a page. She also writes historical fiction under the pen name Griffin Brady.

 G.K. is a wife and the proud mom of three grown sons. When she’s not writing, she might be reading, traveling, drinking wine, listening to music, or gardening—sometimes all at once! She currently resides in Colorado with her very patient husband.

  

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Monday, June 29, 2026

Flash Point by Libby Kay

 

 



A flash of attraction, the potential for more.


Flash Point

Pinegrove FD Book 4

by Libby Kay

Genre: Small-Town Firefighter Sweet Romance


A flash of attraction, the potential for more.

Best-selling author Libby Kay’s sweet fireman romance Flash Point is a bad boy redemption story perfect for fans of B.K. Borison’s Lovelight series.

Javier “Javi” Ortiz never has trouble finding a date. The confident fireman enjoys the perks of no-strings hook-ups and his bachelor lifestyle. Yet when a certain blonde moves to Pinegrove, the idea of casual dating fizzles out. Javi is finally ready to settle down, but will he be able to charm his way into her life? Or will his reputation ruin his chance at real love?

Lola Peabody has given up on love. She doesn’t have time for men and their empty promises, especially with her hands full being a single mom and running her own photography business. Her plans do not include finding a man, even a charismatic fireman who treats her and her daughter like queens.

But Pinegrove is a small town, and the pair can’t stay away from each other. From photoshoots and romance book club to quiet walks in the woods, Lola and Javi spend more and more time together.

Could this be happily ever after? Or will their romance burn out faster than a five-alarm fire?

 

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Never before had Javi held a woman in such regard, kept a woman at arm’s length as they got to know each other. While the notion would have chafed before, now it made perfect sense. He’d do whatever it took to make Lola comfortable, happy. 

Javi wasn’t certain, but the stars shone brighter as he looked up at the night sky. He liked to pretend his mamá was looking out for him, that the twinkling stars were her way of keeping in touch. 

“I love you, Mamá,” he said up into the ether as he leaned back against his deck railing. “And I think I’m falling for someone—you’d love her.”

Well, Javi really didn’t want to lie to his mamá. He wasn’t falling for Lola, he’d already fallen—hard. 





Check out the rest of the series for more smoldering sweet romance!

Find them on Amazon


Libby Kay lives in the city in the heart of the Midwest with her husband. When she’s not writing, Libby loves reading romance novels of any kind. Stories of people falling in love nourish her soul. Contemporary or Regency, sweet or hot, as long as there is a happily ever after—she’s in love!

When not surrounded by books, Libby can be found baking in her kitchen, binging true crime shows, or on the road with her husband, traveling as far as their bank account will allow.

Libby cohosts the Romance Roundup podcast with Liz Donatelli where they recommend romance books and interview authors, influencers, and publishers. Check it out for your weekly dose of romance!

 

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Friday, June 26, 2026

Seasonal Reading: Summer Western Romances to Take on Vacation

 


There is something about summer that makes a reader reach for a Western romance. Maybe it's the wide-open sky. Maybe it's the heat—the kind that shimmers off a dirt road and makes everything feel a little more urgent, a little more alive. Maybe it's simply that a long afternoon on a porch or a beach or a hotel balcony calls for a book with sweep and heart and a satisfying ending. Whatever the reason, summer is one of my favorite times of year to read—and to recommend. If you're packing a bag for vacation, planning a long weekend, or simply looking for the right book to carry out to the hammock, I have some suggestions. All of them are mine, which means I can tell you honestly what's in them and why I think they'd travel well.

What Makes a Good Vacation Read?

Before I get to the list, let me share what I look for in a summer vacation book—because not every good novel is the right novel for a beach bag or a long car ride. A good vacation read pulls you in quickly. You don't want to spend the first fifty pages getting oriented while your family is waiting for you to come swimming. The story should be engaging from the first chapter. It should be satisfying to pick up and put down. Vacation reading happens in fragments—poolside, before dinner, in the car while someone else drives. A book that rewards short sessions as well as long ones travels well. And it should leave you feeling good. Vacation is not the time for relentlessly bleak fiction. I want a book that gives me something to look forward to every time I pick it up, and a happy ending I've genuinely earned by the last page. Western romance, as a genre, checks all of those boxes reliably. Strong characters, clear stakes, romantic tension that builds toward a resolution worth waiting for, and a setting that feels expansive even when you're reading in a very small hotel room. Here are some of mine that I think would travel particularly well this summer.

For the Reader Who Loves a Fresh Start

Amanda's Rancher (Loving a Rancher, Book 1)

Mara O'Sullivan is running from a difficult past and a promise she made to raise her late sister's child. Preston Kincaid is the rancher who agreed to a mail-order bride and got considerably more than he bargained for. This is a story about starting over in a new place with a new identity—which feels appropriate for a vacation read, when you're also, in a small way, stepping out of your ordinary life. The Montana setting is vivid and spacious, the romance builds steadily, and the stakes feel real without being overwhelming. It's the kind of book that's easy to start and hard to put down.

The Rancher's Perfect Bride (Loving a Rancher, Book 5)

Zenobia Stanton is fleeing her stepfather when she becomes a mail-order bride to rancher Callum McFadden. She's trying to adapt to ranch life when her past catches up to her—and Callum has to fight to protect everything they're building together. This one has action alongside the romance, which makes it a particularly good read for a long travel day when you need something that moves.

For the Reader Who Loves Second Chances

The Rancher and the Shepherdess (Loving a Rancher, Book 2)

Gormlaith McGowan arrives in Montana as a widow, expecting a new husband and a new start, only to find that her intended has died. What follows is a marriage of convenience with local rancher Garrett McDonald—a man who didn't plan on any of this either. Second chance romances work beautifully in the summer because there's something about the season that makes people feel open to possibility, and this one delivers on that feeling in full.

Stone Mountain Reunion (Men of Stone Mountain, Texas)

Schoolteacher Gwendolyn Jones reunites with her former sweetheart Mark Hardeman after he mysteriously disappeared years before. This short story is a perfect option if you want something you can finish in a single afternoon by the pool. Second chance, real stakes, and a resolution that satisfies.

For the Reader Who Loves Community and Small-Town Warmth

Brazos Bride (Men of Stone Mountain, Texas, Book 1)

Hope Montoya marries rancher Micah Stone to escape her uncle and clear her name after her father's murder. The Stone Mountain community is present throughout—neighbors, local characters, the texture of a frontier Texas town—and that warmth gives the story a richness that makes it particularly enjoyable when you're reading slowly and savoring.

Murdoch's Bride (Loving a Rancher, Book 3)

Charity Kelso and her companions are stranded by a blizzard and taken in by Logan Murdoch, turning his all-male household upside down. This one is warm and a little funny in places, which makes it ideal summer reading. The disruption of a bachelor household by people who need care and community is the kind of story that makes you smile even in the tense moments.

For the Reader Who Loves a Heroine with Grit

High Stakes Bride (Men of Stone Mountain, Texas, Book 2)

Mary Alice Price is fleeing her stepbrothers' deadly plans when rancher Zach Stone steps in. Mary Alice is a heroine who doesn't wait to be rescued—she makes decisions, takes risks, and earns her own happy ending. For readers who want a heroine they can root for from the first page, this is a strong choice.

Tabitha's Journey (Men of Stone Mountain, Texas, Book 5)

Tabitha Masterson flees her controlling brother after their father's death to become a mail-order bride. Her reluctant groom, Bear Baldwin, isn't exactly what she expected—and neither is the life she finds herself building. Tabitha is one of those heroines who surprises you, and sometimes herself, and that makes for very satisfying reading.

For the Reader Who Loves Holiday Warmth—Even in Summer

Stone Mountain Christmas (Men of Stone Mountain, Texas)

I know what you're thinking: Christmas in July? But hear me out. There is a long tradition of reading Christmas stories in the summer, and this one delivers exactly what a holiday story should—warmth, community, healing, and hope. Celia Dubois returns home to mend her broken heart and finds connection with rancher Eduardo Montoya. It's cozy and satisfying in a way that feels like a gift, whatever month you read it.

A Note on Packing Light

If you're traveling with an e-reader, you can take all of these with you without adding a single ounce to your bag. That is, in my opinion, one of the finest things about modern reading life—the ability to carry an entire summer's worth of books in something that fits in a jacket pocket. If you're a physical book reader, my recommendation is to choose two: one that matches your mood now, and one for when that mood shifts. A fresh-start story and a second-chance story, perhaps. A community novel and a gritty heroine. Pack for the reader you might be on day four of vacation, not just the reader you are today. Either way, I hope one of these finds its way into your bag this summer. Happy reading—and happy travels.

Monday, June 22, 2026

Waiting for You by Sharon C. Cooper

 

 


They say friends make the best lovers...

Waiting For You

Priestly Family Series Book 5

by Sharon C. Cooper

Genre: Contemporary Second Chance Romance



They say friends make the best lovers...

After a bitter divorce, Jackson Norwood never thought he’d fall in love again. Especially not with his best friend, Essence Priestly. His attraction to her is the most powerful thing he's felt in a long time, and he doesn't just want her as a lover. He wants her to be his wife. Yet she’s determined to keep their relationship strictly platonic.

Jackson means everything to Essence and her son, and she’s torn between her love for him and the fear of ruining their years of friendship. But after an impulsive, passionate weekend together, she can’t deny their chemistry is off the charts. Jackson woke up the part of her she thought died years ago, and Essence is tempted to let him have what he wants—her.

But drama from his ex-wife is enough to challenge the strongest connection. Will Essence and Jackson’s reinvented relationship buckle under the pressure? Or will their bond grow stronger and lead them to their happily-ever-after?

 

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“Nyla asked if I’d be willing to share a room with you. I told her it was fine and assumed the two of you had already talked about it. She even had my overnight bag delivered there.”

“I’m going to kill my sisters. All of them,” Essence said through gritted teeth, attitude dangling from each word before she turned narrowed eyes on him. “You know what they’re trying to do, don’t you? You have to know.”

It took everything within Jackson not to smile because she was adorable when she was mad. Which he didn’t witness often. “I have no idea what you’re talking about,” he lied, earning him a deeper glare.

Okay, maybe he knew now, but not at first. He hadn’t thought much of it when Nyla told him of the change because it wasn’t unusual for him and Essence to share a room. But now that he knew her sisters might be trying to push them together, Jackson was totally onboard with their scheming. They all knew how much he adored Essence and how close they were, but they also knew Essence was afraid to move out of the friend zone. It would be just like them to butt in.

He and Essence exited the elevator, and Jackson followed a few steps behind her as she practically stomped down the hallway to their room. She might’ve been pissed, and he probably should be thinking about how he was going to get her to lighten up, but damn her ass looked good in that dress. Watching her shapely hips sway back and forth rhythmically made his body stir in response. Hell, if he could get her to calm down, maybe they could have some fun tonight. It was a new year. A perfect time to start a new chapter in their story. And a little rendezvous in a luxury hotel would only add to the fun.

As if she could hear his thoughts, Essence glanced over her shoulder at him without missing a step. If eyes could shoot invisible daggers, she was definitely shooting them at him, and he felt them square in the chest.

So much for living out a few fantasies tonight. Clearly, the hotel room would be for sleeping only.

Normally, Essence was sweet, kind, and would do anything for anyone. She also had a good sense of humor and took her family’s antics in stride. She didn’t usually trip over stuff like this, especially since she and he often shared a hotel room. The two of them, and sometimes Tray, vacationed together more often than not. Staying in the same room was a norm. So, it was out of character to see her this pissed.

Essence already had her keycard out when she stopped in front of their hotel room door. Seconds later, she stormed inside the room. She didn’t seem to care if he followed her in or not.

Jackson sighed, catching the door before it slammed in his face. This was going to be a long night. He didn’t want to argue, and Essence had every right to be mad—just not at him. She was probably looking forward to relaxing in a beautiful hotel room after a long day. Hell, a couple of long weeks, and here he was crashing any solitude she thought she’d get.

Or maybe she was mad because she had planned to invite that punk ass Romero to the room after the reception.

That thought had Jackson wanting to question her about the guy. Had their relationship moved up from just casual dating? Instead of asking, he kept his mouth shut. She was angry at her sisters, and he didn’t need her to take it out on him. He didn’t have siblings, but he’d been around hers enough to know they all drove each other nuts sometimes.

“Oh, and if you think we’re sleeping in the same bed, think again,” Essence snapped, tossing his duffel bag, which had been on the edge of the king size bed, to the sofa.

Jackson yawned, then slid out of his tuxedo jacket and laid it across the arm of the sofa. Next went the bowtie. “Essence, I don’t know what’s going on with you, but I do know one thing. I’m not sleeping on the sofa.”

 

Copyright © 2026 Sharon. C. Cooper




USA Today bestselling author Sharon C. Cooper loves anything involving romance with a happily-ever-after, whether in books, movies, or real life. She writes contemporary romance, romantic suspense, as well as romantic comedy. She enjoys rainy days, carpet picnics, and family game night. Her stories have won numerous awards, including The Rochelle Alers Best Series award for her Atlanta’s Finest Series (2022) and The Beverly Jenkins Author of the Year award (2021). When she isn’t writing, Sharon loves hanging out with her amazing husband, doing volunteer work, or reading a good book (a romance of course). To read more about Sharon and her novels, or to sign up to be notified of her latest releases, visit www.sharoncooper.net

Friday, June 19, 2026

Father's Day Tribute: Western Romance Heroes Who Are Great Dads

 


Western romance heroes are known for a lot of things. Broad shoulders. A steady hand in a crisis. The ability to look good covered in trail dust. But some of my favorite heroes I've ever written carry a quieter kind of strength—the kind that shows up in how a man treats the children in his care. 

Father's Day feels like the right time to celebrate them. 

In a genre built around rugged individualism and frontier survival, a hero who is also a devoted father stands out. He isn't just protecting his heroine—he's shaping the next generation, often while grieving, rebuilding, and learning how to love again. That combination of toughness and tenderness is, in my opinion, some of the richest material a Western romance can offer. 

Here is a look at some of the heroes and stories in my books where fatherhood—or the desire for it—plays a meaningful role. 

Travis Boyd: The Rancher Who Dreamed of Family 

In To Capture Her Heart (Loving a Rancher, Book 6), rancher Travis Boyd isn't just looking for a wife. He is looking for a family. He dreams of a loving home filled with children, and when widow Vanessa Worthington arrives in Montana with her children in tow, he sees the possibility of everything he's wanted. 

What makes Travis a hero worth celebrating on Father's Day is that he doesn't treat Vanessa's children as a complication. He treats them as part of the package—and part of the promise. That kind of wholehearted welcome, especially in an era when a man had little legal or social obligation to another man's children, says everything about his character. 

Vanessa has been betrayed before and is understandably wary. Travis has to earn her trust not just as a man, but as someone she can trust to care for her children. That's a higher bar, and he rises to meet it. 

Forrest Clanahan: A Father Trying to Heal 

Snare His Heart (Loving a Rancher, Book 7) features Forrest Clanahan, a widower whose heart closed down after his wife died in a fire. He has children who need a mother, and that need is part of what draws him to advertise for a bride. But Forrest isn't simply looking for household help—he is trying to rebuild a life that grief nearly destroyed. 

Heroes like Forrest remind me why widower stories resonate so deeply with readers. He has already loved. He has already lost. He is still standing, still getting up every morning for those children, still putting one boot in front of the other. That kind of quiet, persistent devotion is its own form of heroism—and it doesn't require a gunfight to prove it. 

When Addie Ryan arrives, jilted and starting over herself, the two wounded souls have to figure out whether they can build something real together. The children aren't background detail in that process. They are part of what makes the stakes so high. 

Joel Stone: The Sheriff Who Protects What Matters Most 

In Bluebonnet Bride (Men of Stone Mountain, Texas, Book 3), Sheriff Joel Stone finds himself drawn to Rosalyn, a widow hiding from a false conviction and raising her young daughter, Lucy, largely on her own. 

Joel isn't Lucy's father. But the way he steps up to protect both mother and child—knowing the danger it puts him in, knowing the complications it adds to his life—speaks to the kind of man he is. A man who sees a child in a vulnerable situation and does not look away. That instinct to shelter and defend, extended to a little girl who has no claim on him, is one of the most quietly moving things a Western hero can do. 

Fatherhood isn't always biological. Sometimes it's a choice made in a difficult moment, and Joel makes it without hesitation. 

Butch Parrish: Standing Between a Family and Disaster 

Winter Bride (Men of Stone Mountain, Texas, Book 4) gives us Sheriff Butch Parrish, who steps in to protect Kendra Murdoch and the three children she is desperately trying to keep safe after her sister's murder. 

Butch doesn't have to take on that responsibility. He could do his job, file the report, and keep a professional distance. Instead, he commits—to Kendra's protection and to the safety of those children. The stakes couldn't be higher, and Butch carries them. 

What I love about heroes like Butch is that they show fatherhood as something that can begin before a wedding ring, before a legal tie, before any official claim. It begins with the decision to show up and stand firm for someone who needs you. 

The Murdoch Men: A Household Transformed 

Murdoch's Bride (Loving a Rancher, Book 3) takes a slightly different angle on family. When Charity Kelso and her companions are stranded in a blizzard and taken in by Logan Murdoch, the all-male Murdoch household gets turned upside down. 

There's something I've always enjoyed about writing men who are entirely unprepared for the domestic reality of women and children in their lives—and who rise to meet it anyway. The disruption of a bachelor household by people who need care and community is its own kind of frontier story, and the men who respond with generosity rather than resentment are heroes in the truest sense. 

Why I Write These Heroes 

I didn't set out to write a series of essays about fatherhood in Western romance. But looking back across my books, I notice that the heroes who have stayed with me longest are often the ones carrying the weight of family—children who depend on them, homes they are trying to build, futures they are working to protect. 

The frontier was not a sentimental place. A bad harvest, a harsh winter, or a single outbreak of illness could undo years of work. In that environment, a man who chose to love a child—whether his own or someone else's—was making an act of real courage alongside the everyday acts of survival. 

That's the kind of hero I want to write. And on Father's Day, that's the kind of man worth celebrating.