RANSOM CANYON
Rancher Staten Kirkland, the last descendant of Ransom Canyon's founding father, is rugged and practical to the last. No one knows that when his troubling memories threaten to overwhelm him he runs to lovely, reclusive Quinn O'Grady—or that she has her own secret that no one living knows.
Young Lucas Reyes has his eye on the prize—college, and the chance to become something more than a ranch hand's son. But one night, one wrong decision, will set his life on a course even he hadn't imagined.
Yancy Grey is running hard from his troubled past. He doesn't plan to stick around Ransom Canyon, just to stay long enough to learn the town's weaknesses and how to use them for personal gain. Only Yancy, a common criminal since he was old enough to reach a car's pedals, isn't prepared for what he encounters.
In this dramatic new series, the lives, loves and ambitions of four families will converge, set against a landscape that can be as unforgiving as it is beautiful, where passion, property and pride are worth fighting—and even dying—for.
My Review
I am a fan of Jodi Thomas. I have enjoyed reading many of her books from her Harmony series. So when I saw her coming out with a new book from a new series, I was excited. Ransom Canyon is the first book in the Ransom Canyon series.
While I did like this book and thought it was a nice start to this new series, I cannot rightfully say that I am in love with the characters at this moment. Thus I cannot remember all of the details of each story line. Although the location that this new series centers around is nice. I look forward to reading the next book in this series and getting to know more people of Ransom Canyon.
EXCERPT
FROM RANSOM CANYON by Jodi Thomas
He wasn’t even
sure they were friends some days. Maybe
they were more. Maybe less. He looked down at his palm, remembering how
she’d rubbed cream on it earlier and worried that all they had in common was
loss and the need, now and then, to touch another human being.
The
screen door creaked. He turned as Quinn,
wrapped in an old quilt, moved out into the night.
“I
didn’t mean to wake you,” he said as she tiptoed across the snow-dusted
porch. “I need to get back. Got a hundred new head of cattle coming in at
dawn.” He never apologized for leaving
and he wasn’t now. He was simply stating
facts. With the cattle rustling going on
he might have to hire more men. As
always, he felt like he needed to be on his land and on alert.
She
nodded and moved to stand in front of him.
Staten waited. They never touched after they made love. He usually left without a word, but tonight she obviously had something she wanted to say.
Another
thing he probably did wrong, he thought.
He never complimented her, never kissed her on the mouth, never said any
words after he touched her. If she
didn’t make little sounds of pleasure now and then he wouldn’t have even been
sure he’d satisfied her.
Now,
standing so close to her, he felt more a stranger than a lover. He knew
the smell of her
skin, but he had no idea what she was thinking most of the time. She knew quilting and how to make soap from
her lavender. She played the piano like
an angel and didn’t even own a TV. He
knew ranching and watched every game the Dallas Cowboys played from his
recliner.
If they ever spent over an hour
talking they’d probably figure out they had nothing in common. He’d played every sport in high school and
she’d played in the orchestra. He’d
collected most of his college hours online and she’d gone all the way to New
York to school. But, they’d loved the
same person. Amalah had been Quinn’s
best friend and his one love. Only, they
rarely talked about how they felt. Not
anymore. Not ever really. It was too painful, he guessed, for both.
He watched her. “You want more?” he finally asked, figuring
it was probably the dumbest thing to say to a naked woman standing two inches
away from him. He had no idea what more
would be. They always had sex once, if
they had it at all when he knocked on her door. Sometimes neither made the first move and
they just cuddled on the couch and held each other. Quinn wasn’t a passionate woman. What they did was just satisfying a need that
they both had now and then.
When he finally broke the kiss,
Quinn was out of breath. She pressed her
forehead against his jaw and he waited.
She’d never asked him for
anything. He had no intention of saying
no. His hand spread across the small of
her back. “I won’t forget if that’s what
you want.” He could feel her heart pounding
and knew her asking had not come easy.
She nodded. “It’s what I want.”
He brushed his lips over hers,
loving the way she sighed as if wanting more before she pulled away.
Raking his hair back, he put on his
hat as he watched her fade into the shadows.
The need to return was already building in him. “I’ll be back Friday night if it’s all
right.”
Note from Jodi Thomas
Welcome to a
taste of RANSOM CANYON. When I began my
series, I knew my first character would be Staten Kirkland. He walked into my writing bunkhouse, sat down
and began to tall me his story. He’s a
strong man who always tries to do the right thing, but life has dealt him his
share of blows.
RANSOM CANYON is
the story of a small town at the crossroads between ranches where
lives intertwine.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
A fifth-generation Texan, JODI THOMAS sets the majority of her novels in her home state. With a degree in Family Studies, Thomas is a marriage and family counselor by education, a background that enables her to write about family dynamics. Honored in 2002 as a Distinguished Alumni by Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Thomas enjoys interacting with students on the West Texas A & M University campus, where she currently serves as Writer in Residence. When not working on a novel or inspiring students to pursue a writing career, Thomas enjoys traveling with her husband, Tom, renovating a historic home they bought in Amarillo, and "checking up" on their two grown sons.
3.
What character do you connect most with in Ransom Canyon and
why?
Q&A
with Jodi Thomas
Author of
RANSOM
CANYON
1.
What was your favorite part about writing Ransom Canyon?
I grew up surrounded by
family who were ranchers and farmers. I
always loved the way they loved the land.
They saw themselves, not as the owners, but the caretakers. I loved writing a story where the land and
the weather were almost characters. When
I stepped into Ransom Canyon, the characters crowded around in my mind waiting
for me to tell their story.
I think people all over
are pretty much the same: we love, we dream, we worry, but I heard somewhere
that people in the west are like sturdy furniture with some of the bark left
on.
2.
What was the most challenging part of writing Ransom Canyon?
Making
sure I got it right which wasn’t easy since I hadn’t been on a ranch or farm
for more than a dinner in years. I have
a dear friend with a ranch where they do it all right so I spent the seasons
watching, asking questions and talking to the men who saddle up each day to go
to work.
Then,
I turned a little house out back of my mission home into Ransom Canyon. I posted pictures on the walls, listed family
histories all the way back to the 1800’s, covered every inch of space with
whiteboards to chart the facts. Every
night I go out to what we call the bunk house and step into my story.
In
the first book I connected with Staten Kirkland because I know ranchers like
him. I know the way he thinks and how
hard he tries to do what is right and not show his feelings. Some nights, in my little room off the patio,
I swear he’d be leaning over my shoulder, hat pushed back, reading every
word. Laughing when I got it right. Thumping me in the back of the head when I
got it wrong.
Also,
I connected with Jubalee and her feelings of having used up all her chances
until now she’s even afraid to hope.
I
understood Quinn when she closed herself away from people and Yancy when he hid
his secrets afraid no one would accept him if they knew. I knew how Carter felt following a quest
that made no sense. I’m Charley loving a
child more than himself.
How
can I explain? When I write I’m with all
the characters. I AM every one of them.
4.
Have you ever used real events or people to inspire
character or events in your novels?
I
wrote my mother into a book called TWISTED CREEK years ago. I watched her go slowly into
Alzheimer’s. The journey offered
heartache and blessings. Even now,
almost fifteen years later, I sometimes stop and watch the clouds. She’d forgotten my name those last few years,
but she never lost the wonder when she looked at the sky. I figure she’s still watching, just from another
direction.
Many
times I’ve felt like my life was research for my writing. A tumble from a horse left me with a slight
limp I have trouble hiding when I’m tired.
I witnessed a robbery when I was 17 and don’t remember being afraid,
only fascinated at how terrified the kid robbing the store looked. My big
brother was shot in Viet Nam and it seems like that is where all my heroes take
a bullet.
If
you met me, you’d meet a quiet person who watches people but I never put real
people in books. My sister-in-law kept
bugging me to be in a book. So a few
years back I put her and my big brother in a book. I made them chickens. J
5.
Would you ever write a memoir? What are your feelings about
writing a memoir?
I
don’t think I’d write about my life. Not
all that exciting. I married my first
love, raised two sons and they blessed us with four grandchildren. I like traveling, working in my flower
garden, teaching my oldest grand who is 6 to sew and my 4 year-old to cook.
If I
did write a book it would be about my journey into writing. What it’s like to have a dream so strong you
give up sleep for five years before you have any success. How it feels to live your life in two worlds
every day. I think I’d call it RARE AIR,
because I believe writers develop in rare air.
I don’t think you can educate or make a writer. I think they evolve.
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