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Book Review of Secrets of a Midnight Moon

Secrets of a Midnight Moon
Secrets of a Midnight Moon
Author: Jane Bonander
Genre: Romance
Book Type: Paperback
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This was such an uninspired read that I was unable to recall anything about the book 6 weeks after I'd finished it. I had to reread it to be able to write a summary and review.

Half-Indian Nicholas Gaspard pulls a slick trick of kidnapping new schoolmarm Anna Jenson; he needs her to teach Indian children in his hide-away school. These children have been spirited away from situations in which they were virtual slaves to whites. However, Anna was hired to teach the white children in a nearby town.

As a product of her environment, Anna thinks Indians were ignorant savages. As she works with the Indian children, she realizes they are just like other children, except for their haunted looks. The person who keeps Anna most off-kilter is Nicholas; one time he seems to like her and seconds later he is cutting and rude. Nicholas is still troubled by the white woman he loved who rejected him because of his mixed ancestry.

Nicholas' half-brother, Marcus (not of mixed blood), is still looking for the teacher who disappeared into thin air. He is aided by his father-in-law; they are also searching for the person who steals Indian children from white homes.

I liked the plot and the unique way of addressing the abuse of Indians by whites. However, the story did not emotionally grab me; it seemed to be a distant story about not very interesting lead characters. Rereading the book did not make it any more emotionally engaging than the first time.

Novels
Secrets of a Midnight Moon (1991)
Heat of a Savage Moon (1993)
Forbidden Moon (1994)