Deep River promise

Jackie Ashenden

Book - 2021

"Welcome to Deep River, Alaska. Damon Fitzgerald's only desire is to get back to LA and out of the tiny Alaskan town he's somehow inherited. But first he has to keep a promise he made to his old army buddy and look out for his friend's son. That would be a whole lot easier if the kid's mother wasn't the mayor of Deep River... Astrid James didn't ask to be mayor of Deep River but since she is, she intends to do right by the town and her son. The last thing she needs is an arrogant outsider coming in and taking charge, no matter how attractive he is. But when Astrid starts to realize that Damon is more than just a pretty face, she'll have to decide whether she can risk her heart and her son's happi...ness on a man who's mission is to leave Deep River."--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
Naperville, Illinois : Sourcebooks Casablanca [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Jackie Ashenden (author)
Item Description
Includes an excerpt from the author's Sunset on Deep River (pages 261-280).
Physical Description
280 pages ; 18 cm
ISBN
9781728216898
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Astrid and Damon find lasting love and family in the second of Ashenden's Alaska Homecoming series. Caleb West was the owner of the self-proclaimed "middle of nowhere" village of Deep River, Alaska. Dead in a plane crash, he willed the town to his three Army buddies, Silas, Zeke, and Damon. But to Damon Fitzgerald, he also sent a very special letter, asking his friend to look after Connor, the teenage son he'd fathered at 17 and abandoned. Connor's mother, Astrid James, had found sanctuary in Deep River five years ago after fleeing an abusive relationship. With nowhere to go, she'd reached out to Caleb, who gave her and Connor a place to live in the small, eccentric town, where she has thrived. Astrid became the town mayor. She's also its librarian; she started the hot yoga class; she's putting together a food cooperative so that vegetables don't have to be airlifted to the Alaska wilderness. And she's working on tourism ideas so that villagers won't sell their land to oil companies, which have located petroleum underneath the town. But there's one thing she hasn't done in five years: She hasn't felt like a woman. Damon, an Alaska bush pilot and the handsomest man she's ever seen, was on his way home to Los Angeles to look after his sick mother. Instead, loyal to a fault, he comes to Deep River to keep his promise to his friend. Damon had also had a child at 17, but his daughter, Ella, died of cancer and her mother left him, and now he likes to live life on the surface: no emotions, no commitments, and absolutely no serious relationships with women. He sees Astrid as a Snow Queen. But in fact it's Damon who melts. Both wounded and hurting in different ways, the couple discover that love conquers pain, and putting down roots in a community trumps living an uninvolved life. A few mentions of snow-peaked mountains aside, this heartfelt journey--with sex--could transfer anywhere. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.