Cat gives
this one 5 Meows with a 2 Purr heat index...
This is one of my favorite
western/rodeo series. The cover is beautiful! I loved Cowboys Don’t Come Out
and Cowboys Don’t Ride Unicorns. I have been waiting for more in the series and
this one didn’t disappoint.
Maury is on top of the
charts and destined to be World Champion. He is reaching his peak in years
though and with his best friend Danny coming out and marrying his lover, working
with Rand and Kai another loving gay couple, he longs for more. He feels he can
never have it since he is sure his older brother’s death was no accident and
his uncles had something to do with it.
When he finds out his youngest brother is gay, he fears for Antonio. His
rival with Silva gets worse on tour and when he meets the youngest Silva,
Tristao, staying in the closet may e harder than he thought.
I loved all these
characters especially Tristao. I liked getting to meet Danny, Laury and Rand
and Kai again too.
The storyline is good too.
I didn’t want to put the book down once I started. I have to say I would have loved to see that
Samba scene!
You could read this as a
standalone, but with as much as Danny, Laury, Rand, and Kai are in it, you may
want to read the first two, so you understand those characters and get a better
grasp of the story.
If you like Cowboys, Rodeos,
interesting characters, age gap, family rivalries, and a hot romance this is
for you!
Excerpt…
Chapter One
JESUCRISTO ON a
cracker! My ass bones are permanently connected to my back teeth. Happy effing birthday to me.
Maury Garcia hit the
saddle again with a bone-jarring jolt. The sound of the horn signaling eight
seconds prompted a flash of his teeth, and then he waved his hat an extra
second for good measure, loosened his rope, and slid to the side of the fifteen
hundred pounds of semimean he’d drawn for this round. Hope it’s good
enough. The bull was big, shiny black, and scary-looking, but he
wouldn’t get the highest score for this ride. Not enough spin.
Maury’s boots hit the dirt
of the arena, and he moved fast toward the fence while trying to look like he
wasn’t rushing at all. It’s all in the attitude, ladies and gentlemen.
The announcer yelled, “A
classic ride from champion Maury Garcia. Give him a hand big enough to show how
much you appreciate that talent, ladies and gentlemen.”
At the fence, Maury
turned, gave a sweeping bow, then stepped behind and hopped up on top to
receive his score.
His right-hand guy, Earl
Westerman, came up to the fence. “Good one.”
“Thanks. Bull was pretty
good.”
“You were great.” Earl
punched Maury lightly on the arm with one of his big fists.
Maury smiled. Earl was
somebody you went to for moral support, not objectivity.
Applause started as the
announcer said, “The judges have awarded that classic Garcia ride with 92.5.”
Earl grinned, an
expression that lit up his plain, everyman face. “See. I told you.”
Maury shrugged. “Good
enough for now.” But it was a gift for sure. Maybe the judges knew it was his
birthday. Right. That news he didn’t share with anybody.
A heavily accented voice
over his shoulder said, “So the judges gave you another package in a big bow,
right, Wetback? You’d think they’d be professional enough to not be impressed
by your reputation.”
Maury didn’t even have to
turn to face the tall, handsome, meaner-than-any-pissant-bull Brazilian, but he
did. “You think you can do better, Cheeses?” The guy’s name was Xesús, but in
that language it sounded like “Cheeses” to Maury. So what if he exaggerated the
pronunciation?
Maury showed lots of
enamel, and Silva gave it back. He and Xesús Silva pretended they were just
kidding with their snark. In real life, it was dead-on serious. The dude thought
he was Jesus in the flesh. The fact that he was one of the few guys who could
screw Maury’s chances at being world champion that year didn’t help.
“On the bull, I drew, man,
I can ride circles around you. Hell, my kid brother could beat you.”
“I’ll be watching with
interest, Cheddar.” Maury gripped his lucky gold medallion between two fingers
and slid it on its chain. Back and forth. It was one of the few reminders he
had of his brother Ramon, and it soothed him.
Silva fought the grip of
his black eyebrows and managed to conjure a smile that didn’t light up
anything.
Earl said, “Hey, Silva,
half your guys can’t even speak English. How come you do?”
“I’m smarter. And richer.”
He cocked his Resistol over his eyes and walked away with a roll of his hips
Maury couldn’t help but notice.
“Think he can do it?” Earl
stared after Silva, who sadly was at least half as good as he thought he was,
which made him very good indeed.
“Might.”
“You’re two points ahead
right now.”
“Yeah, but he outscored me
on the last round. On Ash Hat he could do better this round.”
Earl kept staring toward
the pack of Brazilian riders grouped together near the bull paddock. “I hear
Silva’s brother’s gonna compete as a rookie this season.”
Maury glanced over. “His
brother’s no rookie. You’ve met him. Jose. Older than Cheez Whiz. Not as mean.”
“No, this is a younger
brother. Hear he did real well on the Brazilian PBRA circuit, so he came north
just this week. Since he’s starting late, he’ll get in fewer rides, but he’ll
get experience.”
“Yeah, well, those
Brazilians stick together.”
“I think it’s because they
all live on that ranch during the season, while our boys go home.”
Maury shook his head.
“They’ve gotta have some serious patriotism to put up with Xesús. I admire most
of those guys. You can’t tell me they like him.”
“Nah. I hear a lot of them
can’t stand him, but he’s pretty free with his fists, so most of them keep
their mouths shut around him.”
“Lovely.”
Maury turned back to the
arena. Another ride had gone by. The cowboy qualified but didn’t come close to
Maury’s score.
The announcer called,
“Next up on Ash Hat, from Salvador, Brazil, Xesús Silva.” The announcer
pronounced it “Jaysus,” which made Maury snort, but he sobered as he stared at
the latch man about to open the gate for Silva’s ride. Maury took a breath. He
didn’t want to ask God for any special favors just because it was his birthday,
but of course not wanting to and not doing it were two different things.
The gate flew open, and
Ash Hat plunged straight out. That probably threw Silva off because this bull
was a spinner. But to prove he was no predictable pussy, Ash Hat bucked
forward, throwing out his hind legs like a sumbitch, one of the hardest moves
to stay on. In midbuck, the damned bull seemed to levitate, then shift into a
tight spin. Damned Xesús stayed on like he was glued to the bull’s back. Maury
could practically hear the points adding up.
Earl shifted uncomfortably
next to him. Yeah, he knew how the ride was scored same as the next man, and he
saw Maury going down in flames.
Just to make Earl feel
better, Maury said, “No worries. We’ll get him next time.” Maury clasped his
lucky medallion, dragging it back and forth. It was early in the season. Plenty
of time to grind that Brazilian to dust. Plenty of time to win—even if he was
fucking thirty years old. I could have gone all night without
remembering that.
Ash Hat spun and bucked
and Silva waved his black hat like the champion he wanted to be.
Wish I could walk
away. He slid the medallion
against his cheek.
Suddenly a sparkle of
light flashed across the arena. Silva seemed to look, blink; his free hand
sailed in an arc and slap! He touched the side of the bull.
A collective gasp went up
from the crowd as the horn sounded eight seconds.
Maury stared around. Wait,
what?
Some people cheered, but
the crowd was buzzing.
“Silva slapped.” Earl
practically bounced. “Did you see that? He touched. He’s disqualified.”
“How?”
As Silva slid off the bull
and the bullfighters went to work, the judge tapped the back of his hand.
Holy shit, it’s a
disqualification. Happy
birthday to me.
Tara Lain believes in
happy ever afters—and magic. Same thing. In fact, she says, she doesn’t
believe, she knows. Tara shares this passion in her stories, which star her
unique, charismatic heroes and adventurous heroines. Quarterbacks and cops,
werewolves and witches, blue collar or billionaires, Tara’s characters, readers
say, love deeply, resolve seemingly insurmountable differences, and ultimately
live their lives authentically. After many years living in southern California,
Tara, her soulmate honey, and her soulmate dog decided they wanted fewer cars
and more trees, prompting a move to Ashland, Oregon, where Tara’s creating new
stories and loving living in a small town with big culture. Likely a Gryffindor
but possessed of Parseltongue, Tara loves animals of all kinds, diversity, open
minds, coconut crunch ice cream from Zooeys, and her readers. She also loves to
hear from you.
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love the excerpt and review..love tara's books
ReplyDeleteThank you for the excerpt and review!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for having me and my guys!! Hugs! : )
ReplyDeleteThank you sooooo much for reading Cowboys Don't Samba! Hugs! I'm so very happy you liked it. Sorry to be late saying thank yoooou!. I had some posting issues. : )
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