Crow Mountain

Crow Mountain

by Lucy Inglis

Narrated by Avita Jay, Caitlin Thorburn

Unabridged — 10 hours, 18 minutes

Crow Mountain

Crow Mountain

by Lucy Inglis

Narrated by Avita Jay, Caitlin Thorburn

Unabridged — 10 hours, 18 minutes

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Overview

While on holiday in Montana, Hope meets local boy Cal Crow, a ranch-hand. Caught in a freak accident, the two of them take shelter in a mountain cabin where Hope makes a strange discovery. More than a hundred years earlier, another English girl met a similar fate. Her rescuer: a horse-trader called Nate. In this wild place, both girls learn what it means to survive and to fall in love, neither knowing that their fates are intimately entwined.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Praise for Crow Mountain:"Sweeping and suspenseful romance . . . Readers will be caught up with Emily's and Hope's exciting journeys." —Kirkus Reviews

School Library Journal

04/01/2016
Gr 8 Up—In alternating chapters, two 16-year-old British girls have parallel, romantic adventures in Montana, a century apart. Hope travels with her feminist, environmental scientist mother for a summer stay at the Montana ranch of Caleb Crow. Despite her mother's cautions, Hope is immediately attracted to Caleb's handsome, brooding son Cal. When Hope finds a diary labeled "Montana 1867" in the barn loft, the compelling account of Emily, an aristocratic girl sent west for an arranged marriage, unfolds. Hope shares the diary with Cal, and they realize that Emily is describing familiar Crow ranch land, predecessors of local people, events that shaped current relationships and hostilities, and a mysterious cowboy who rescued Emily after a carriage disaster. Emily's 19th-century fears, isolation, discomfort, and commitment to fulfill her parents' wishes fade as she falls in love with Montana and her unnamed cowboy. Meanwhile, Hope and Cal embark on a perilous road trip that coincidentally follows Emily's story and footsteps: they crash at a bridge, shelter in a wilderness cabin, have discreet sex, and take part in a violent shoot-out. Emily and Hope are refined young women liberated by love and wilderness from the constraints of parental and societal expectations. Despite narration and dialogue that is stilted in spots and the Crow family's surprising lack of awareness about their own heritage, this action-packed Western romance reveals a generational feud, Native American family connections, and the power of love to transcend time, place, and social differences. VERDICT Romance fans will enjoy the coincidence construct of the two stories; the attraction between enigmatic, rugged cowboys and refined English girls; and the enduring love that Emily and Hope discover.—Gerry Larson, formerly at Durham School of the Arts, NC

Kirkus Reviews

2016-02-17
The parallel stories of rescue, love, and burgeoning self-reliance, 150 years apart, of two refined 16-year-old white English girls whose lives are changed in the American West by young, rugged, sensitive pioneers/cowboys with secrets. In the present-day (and in the third person), Hope Cooper and her mother travel to a Montana ranch for research, lodging with the Crows, Caleb and his hardworking, handsome 19-year-old son, Cal. In 1867 and recounted in a diary/letter addressed to "you" that Hope finds in the barn loft, Emily Forsythe describes traveling by stagecoach through Montana toward an arranged marriage in Oregon. When the coach crashes, only Emily survives, rescued by Nate, a captivating blue-eyed horse trader and railway scout. In alternating chapters, Hope's and Emily's engrossing stories mirror each other (as do Cal's and Nate's), from injury to adjustment to the wilderness, coping with injustice, their first kisses, and beyond. Danger lurks at every turn in this sweeping and suspenseful romance, but its history is not well-integrated. Inglis packs in too much of her research, dropping in issues without really developing them, including women's subservient status; that of Nate's Apsáalooke family and his half sister, Rose, who is "two spirits in one body, a man and a woman"; the near-extinction of the bison; bullying. Still, the romances (with all their implausibilities) take precedence, and readers will be caught up with Emily's and Hope's exciting journeys. (Fiction/historical fiction. 14-18)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940178992814
Publisher: W. F. Howes Ltd
Publication date: 01/07/2016
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

Hope wasn't listening. She was staring at a tall boy wearing jeans, plain brown leather boots and a plaid shirt with the sleeves rolled above his elbows. He was on his phone with his weight slightly on one leg, shrugging as he talked and scanned the stragglers. Everything about him was narrow and angular, his hips, his chest, his throat. He had bright blue eyes, shiny brown hair pushed off his face, a sharp jaw, and tanned skin. Hope had never seen anything like him. She knew she was staring as she began to revise her expectations of Montana very sharply upwards. He caught her gaze and stopped talking. There was a long second before the person on the other end of the line gained his attention again, as Hope and the young cowboy stared at each other.

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