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Paradise County

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
One of the most popular voices in women's fiction" (Newsweek), Karen Robards delivers another electrifying national bestseller with this story of unexpected attraction and evil that lurks beneath a bit of Southern splendor.
Left bankrupt after her billionaire father's sudden death, Alexandra Haywood returns to Shelby County, Kentucky—that bit of Southern splendor known as Paradise County—to sell the family's magnificent horse farm. Part of her mission is to fire Joe Welch, the sexy, stubborn farm manager who worked hard for the Haywoods while raising his children. But Joe refuses to be fired, and he and Alex clash. They also fall for each other—hard. Just as their attraction flares, a shocking murder with ties to the past rocks the county—and cuts close to home when Joe's teenage son, Eli, and Alex's wild-spirited younger sister, Neely, vanish. Now, the evil that lurks beneath Paradise County raises its gruesome head—and Alex is targeted as the next victim.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 30, 2000
      Set in Kentucky bluegrass country, Robard's latest romance-cum-thriller (after Ghost Moon) is suspenseful and atmospheric, another winner by a doyenne of the bestseller lists. By turns the gory saga of a psychopath with a penchant for burning his victims alive and a tender tale of true love, the novel veers into extremes, but is still an engaging read. Joe Welch, the stalwart manager of Whistledown Farm in beautiful Paradise County, is a struggling single father possessed of an alcoholic dad, three kids and a passion for horseflesh. When his employer, Charles Haywood, turns up dead in the Whistledown stables, an apparent suicide, Joe knows trouble lies ahead, but he doesn't expect to be fired by Haywood's gorgeous, brilliant photographer daughter, Alex. Granted, Alex doesn't have much choice. Not only is her beloved father dead, but his financial empire has crumbled. Alex's woes soon multiply: informed by telephone that her duplicitous fianc has married someone else, she must also cope with her willful young sister, Neely, who has run away from boarding school to join Alex in Kentucky. Though Alex and Joe (described as "sex on a stick") start out on the wrong foot, events require them to get to know one another better, and sparks fly. Meantime, however, a resourceful local who makes Hannibal Lecter look tame threatens their happiness, their families and their sanity. Even though the narrative loses steam after a particularly strong first chapter, and Robards's villain is two-dimensional, readers will cheer and care for her protagonists. 125,000 first printing.

    • Library Journal

      November 15, 2000
      Photographer Alexandra Haywood returns to her family's horse farm in Kentucky after her father's apparent suicide in order to wrap up his affairs. The family fortune is gone, her half-sister has been expelled from school, and, when she tries to fire farm manager Joe Welch, he informs her that he has an unbreakable contract. Alex figures things can't get much worse, but she is unaware that a sadistic serial killer has his eye on her. Robards's roots in the romance genre (To Love a Man) show to advantage as she explores the developing relationship between widower Joe, a father of three, and the recently jilted Alex, who is largely responsible for raising her needy half-sister. This part of the novel is both enjoyable and involving. The scenes with the serial killer and his victims are gruesome, however, and readers who thought her Ghost Moon (LJ 2/1/00) was violent will find the author's latest even more so. Those who refuse to read books in which an animal is harmed will also want to avoid this book. Still, this is a fast-paced, suspenseful novel that less squeamish fans of romantic suspense should enjoy. Recommended for public libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 7/00.]--Elizabeth Mellett, Brookline P.L., MA

      Copyright 2000 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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