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One Red Rose (Clayborne Brides)
One Red Rose - Clayborne Brides
Author: Julie Garwood
The Claybornes are back -- and love is in bloom! First introduced in Julie Garwood's magnificent New York Times bestseller For the Roses, which inspired the Hallmark Hall of Fame television film Rose Hill, the Clayborne brothers of Blue Belle, Montana, have been embraced by millions worldwide. Now Julie Garwood spins the individual stories of th...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780671010102
ISBN-10: 0671010107
Publication Date: 8/1/1997
Pages: 160
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 148

3.9 stars, based on 148 ratings
Publisher: Pocket
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
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  • Currently 0/5 Stars.
reviewed One Red Rose (Clayborne Brides) on + 27 more book reviews
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Wonderful series!

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  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
reviewed One Red Rose (Clayborne Brides) on + 28 more book reviews
I read the whole series and really liked the books. They are fast reads and will have you wanting to read the next book in the series to pick up where they story left off in the previous book
  • Currently 2.5/5 Stars.
reviewed One Red Rose (Clayborne Brides) on + 101 more book reviews
This is the third novel of The Clayborne Brides. I also have the first and 2nd novel, but who ever owned them before me had to tape the covers to keep them from falling off the book. So if you like this book and are wanting the set I'd be happy to send all three of them just for the one credit of the good book.

Book1: One Pink Rose:

Travis Clayborne may be the youngest of the Clayborne brothers, but he's definitely his own man. Unless it means saying no to his beloved Mama Rose. And that's why Travis is escorting young Bostonian Emily Finnegan to Golden Crest, Montana- where she'll discover what awaits her as a mail-order bride. Emily has made it perfectly clear that she's taken charge of her destiny and nothing is going to interfere. Falling in love with the perfect stranger isn't part of her plan, but the journey with Travis across this beautiful, rugged land opens her eyes... and her heart. Perhaps her destiny isn't exactly as she imagined.

Book2: One White Rose:

Douglas Clayborne will never turn his back on anyone in need, and everyone in Blue Belle know it. Time and again, his intolerance of cruelty of any kind has made him a champion of the defenseless... but his quiet strength faces its ultimate battle when he meets Isabel Grant. He arrives at her ranch to pick up the magnificent Arabian stallion he's purchased, but he cannot leave the vulnerable woman behind when he discovers the danger that threatens her. Convincing the stubborn, strong-willed beauty that she needs him is another matter. Douglas can stop the men from stealing her ranch and her horses, but he cannot stop Isabel Grant from stealing his heart.

Book3: One Red Rose:

Adam Clayborne has always put great stock in the power of books. As an escaped slave- and wanted man- reading has been his only ticket to the wonders of distant lands. Adam is content with his life as a confirmed bachelor, which is why his Mama Rose has summoned the irresistible Genevieve Delacroix to Montana. Also a former slave, Genevieve shares his dream of seeing the world, but she arrives to find Adam unfailingly polite... and just as distant. Undaunted, Genevieve determines to teach Adam what he'll never learn from a book- that true freedom only comes when you open your heart.
  • Currently 3/5 Stars.
reviewed One Red Rose (Clayborne Brides) on + 775 more book reviews
ISBN 0671010107 - There seems to be a few reviewers who expected - or hoped for - more than a shallow romance novel in One Red Rose and were disappointed. Since I think all romance novels are shallow romance novels, no disappointment here! Let's get the negatives out of the way first: the West (as opposed to today's "the west") is often said, historically speaking, to have been more open-minded about race, hard work and honesty being more important than color. However... the fact that race was an absolute NON-issue in this book was a little hard to accept. I admit I haven't yet read any of the others in the series, so perhaps they covered that sort of ground and Garwood didn't want to beat the topic to death. Still, the book only had two clues to the fact that the characters were black. One was the reference to a couple people being former slaves and since not all slaves were black, that was kind of vague. The other was when Genevieve was asked to pose as Ruby Leigh Diamond, formerly Alice O'Reilly, and she pointed out that her ancestors came here from Africa, "Surely you noticed."

That aside, romance novels are generally fluff, and this one is no more or less fluffy than any other I've read. Adam Clayborne lives in a now-empty house on the family ranch in Montana. His brothers have married and moved away and Mama Rose has it in mind to get Adam married, too. She's even picked the woman out for him, AND invited her to the ranch for the family celebration of Mama Rose's birthday. Genevieve is beautiful enough, but Adam is happy as a bachelor. Luckily for him, she doesn't want to marry him, either. Or so she says - but she says a lot of things that aren't true. For one thing, she says she's not in trouble. If that were true, why does she run off when a telegram arrives, without even saying good-bye? Adam is determined to find out and chases after her.

Standard romance novel ending, with the usual formula along the way. One highlight (or disappointment, depending on why you read this genre) was the lack of heaving and aching, et al, that generally takes up several pages and makes it possible for the author to get away with less storytelling work. Sadly, that took One Red Rose out of the running for my "worst line in the world" contest. There was a funny moment to me when, having run away into the woods with a night's lead at least, Genevieve is caught up to by Adam. She cuddles up against him and the line "She smelled so good to him..." cracked me up. A full day of riding hard to get away and she smells good? Please.

If I come across another book by Garwood, I'll read it because I'll read anything, but I wouldn't expend any energy trying to find the rest of this series.

- AnnaLovesBooks


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