5 STAR Multicultural Romance
Multicultural contemporary romance. On crutches and no longer able to fly jets, Brett is grateful to have come home alive instead of in a box. Though he’s still got his leg, there’s a lot of pain, too so a relative sends him to see the lovely herbalist who helps people with pain and nerve problems. One look at her and Brett wants more than pain relief.Nikee has a secret room beneath her greenhouse full of pot plants. The woman began growing medical marijuana several years ago to help her father after a horrid accident, and she has no plans to quit. Hopefully telling Brett about the grow operation won’t cost her a relationship with the man.
If the delicate balance of her relationship with Brett isn’t enough, someone else has discovered her secret. He wants her crop and will do anything to cash in on her work, but Nikee can't go to the Troopers for help.
Reviewed in the United States on October 22, 2016
Verified Purchase
I had read some of Cherime MacFarlane’s short stories, such as A White Cat for Christmas, and didn’t pay attention when I grabbed this, having though it would be a short story. Instead of that I discovered a well-developed full-length novel. As I’ve been busy in took me a few weeks to read the book. I was able to instantly re-connect to the plot and characters and enjoy the sections I read, even though there were long breaks between reading chapters.
Other reviewers have mentioned the realism in Grass and Blue Skies; it is that realism, the originality, the knowing that you are being trusted to an interview of a life and place different to your own, but with humanitarian parallels that you can relate to that draws me back to Cherime’s work when I tire of the genre and trope formula writers. Fresh as an early Alaskan Spring morning. I’ll be back for more by this author.
Other reviewers have mentioned the realism in Grass and Blue Skies; it is that realism, the originality, the knowing that you are being trusted to an interview of a life and place different to your own, but with humanitarian parallels that you can relate to that draws me back to Cherime’s work when I tire of the genre and trope formula writers. Fresh as an early Alaskan Spring morning. I’ll be back for more by this author.
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