Swept from her modern life into the post-Civil War Old West, Emily is greeted by a handsome desperado and joins his band of outlaws. When the Feds come to capture her Blue-Eyed Bandit, Emily proves that Western justice has its limits, and true love can break any laws–even those of time and space.
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Sexual Content - 4/5
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Violence - 2/5
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Language - 2/5
2/5
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Drugs and Alcohol - 1/5
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Summary
Blue-Eyed Bandit has been on my reading list for quite some time, and based on good reviews and other things I’d heard about it, I’ve been looking forward to giving it try. I’m happy to report that it didn’t disappoint. It’s a very fun, enjoyable story about Emily, a young woman who eavesdrops on a conversation between Adrian and Cora, a married couple in her book store. They were looking for information on the fate of a man named Darian who lived in the Old West, and whom they act as though they personally knew. After discovering that Darian was hanged as an outlaw, they tell Emily a tale of traveling through time using a mystical whirlwind. She doesn’t really believe them, but the romantic side of herself she thought she’d buried when her former love betrayed her wants to believe. After the couple tells her what a wonderful man Darian was and how he didn’t deserve his fate, Emily allows them to train her for the time jump in hopes of saving his life. When the magic whirlwind dumps her right at Darian’s feet, her first impression of the man is that he’s nothing like what her new friends described. Not to mention, the stubborn man insists upon continuing along the same path despite her dire warnings of what the future will hold. Emily sticks by his side, though, and what she finds is a man who is actually more than he seemed at first glance. She finds herself falling for him, but can she save him?
Emily is a woman who’s nursing a broken heart. The man she thought loved her married her and then walked out of her life without a backward glance within a mere week of the wedding, leaving her devastated. She’d given up on love and romance until a blue-eyed bandit renews her faith in men and reignites her passion. On some level, Emily is definitely the adventurous sort to agree to the harebrained scheme of traveling back in time, when she isn’t even sure she believes it’s possible. Admittedly she doesn’t have the best reasons for going along with the plan, but once she’s there in the Old West, she throws all her energy into trying to save Darian, who in some ways, is his own worst enemy. The more she falls for him, the more determined she is to keep him alive at all costs. When they first meet, Emily is a little prickly toward Darian, finding him irritating, when I thought he was rather charming. But luckily it doesn’t take too long for her to warm up to him, and once she does, she turns her ire toward more worthy subjects. I really like how, with Darian, Emily is able to open her heart once more to the magic of love and find healing in his arms, along with a more daring and passionate side to her personality.
I loved Darian almost from the minute he appeared on the page. He’s a born leader who was given command of a regiment of soldiers in the Civil War at the tender age of eighteen, but he proved himself more than worthy of men following him. That’s why when he discovered that one of the generals over him was corrupt and decided to mutiny, a small group of his loyal men went with him. Ever since, they’ve been traveling around Arizona, looking for proof of the general’s perfidy in order to clear their own names of the mutiny charges, while inadvertently getting themselves into trouble and earning the name outlaws. I adored Darian for being the absolute perfect gentleman in all circumstances, even when holding up a stagecoach. It made for some genuinely funny moments, while at the same time, being utterly sweet and charming. One of the reasons I was so looking forward to this book is that I’d heard Darian was one of the rare virgin heroes in romance, which I typically love. At first, he’s actually something of a prude, but it gradually becomes clear that he harbors a deeply passionate side. He just needed the right woman to unleash it. That’s part of why I enjoy virgin heroes so much. When written well, they exhibit an innocent enthusiasm for bedroom activities that can be very romantic and appealing, as well as sexy, which was something Darian certainly possessed. What I loved most, though, is his sense of honor. For him, his entire mission is all about restoring honor to himself and his men. There’s just something about a genuinely honorable man that is extremely attractive and utterly sexy to me.
Overall, Blue-Eyed Bandit was a joy to read. It’s light-hearted and funny, but at the same time, there’s a deeply emotional side to the story. It’s very well-plotted, and aside from a few odd words choices that could have been smoothed out, it was well-written, too. Darian and Emily’s falling in love and marrying comes about perhaps just a tad too quickly, but in general, I was OK with it, since the emotional connection between them was definitely there, especially as the story progressed. The love scenes were completely perfect with just the right amount of steam. I adored Darian as the hero, and once Emily got over her prickly phase, I really liked her, as well. Darian’s men were a great group of guys who I liked a lot, too, and the townspeople of Tucson brought even more life to the story. Having the book set in my home-state of Arizona was the icing on the cake. Before reading Blue-Eyed Bandit, I didn’t know it was connected to another of Stobie Piel’s stories. While reading the advertising blurbs in the back of the book, I discovered that Adrian and Cora’s story is told in Free Falling, which actually comes first in this untitled series, and Darian plays a role in it. I’m not sure what happened to Ms. Piel, as she seems to have dropped off the radar more than a decade ago, but after a great reading experience with this book, I’m very much looking forward to reading Free Falling and checking out more of her work.
Review provided by The Hope Chest Reviews (http://www.thcreviews.com)