Night Falls Like Silk
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Average customer review:Product Description
A gripping sequel to the romantic suspense The Night Remembers from USA Today bestselling/Rita–Award–winning author Kathleen Eagle.
Thomas Little Wolf had grown up on the streets and barely escaped with his life and dignity intact. Now an adult, Thomas has beaten the odds and become a successful underground comic book artist. But although Tom has created a better life for himself, he cannot evade the ties of his brother, who is deeply immersed in the dark world of drugs. Tom meets beautiful Cassandra Westbrook at an auction and almost immediately they begin a love affair that rocks both their worlds. And when a series of valuable drawings is stolen, a new mystery begins to unravel Tom's life. In the process of tracking down the drawings and the murky history behind them, Laura and Tom find out just how sinister Tom's past can be – and how deeply and dangerously his fate is enmeshed with that of his brother's. Danger lurks on each path, drawing them together and at the same time threatening to tear them apart.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1131259 in Books
- Published on: 2005-02-10
- Original language: English
- Binding: Mass Market Paperback
- 288 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Cassandra Westbrook and Thomas Brown Wolf have nothing and everything in common. She's blond-on-pale; he's African-American, Lakota Sioux and "a little bit white." She's a rich widow with an elegant home, vibrant social life and successful Minneapolis art gallery; he's a loner who seems to live through the dark thoughts and derring-do of the characters in his comics and graphic novels. From the moment they meet at Sotheby's in Chicago, as the two high bidders for a folio of Native American ledger drawings, it's a dance of attraction and suspicion. Fans of Eagle's hardcover debut, The Night Remembers, will have an advantage when it comes to untangling the hero's many personas: he's Thomas Warrior, Tommy T. or Tom, depending on who's in the room. But first-time readers will have the advantage when it comes to edge-of-the-seat suspense involving Thomas's felon brother, Victor. And all will enjoy the nuanced portraits of Cassandra's adolescent nephew, Aaron, an artist and loner, whose kidnapping drives the drama. Eagle, a white woman married to a Lakota Sioux, enriches the romance genre with her unforced, unaffected multiculturalism. No doctrine, no rainbow parades here-just an appreciation for all that is human. Eagle's prose may occasionally be more cotton than silk, but her scene setting is convincing and her pacing flawless.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
In this sequel to The Night Remembers (1997), Eagle blends Native American lore with lusty romance while lacing the plot with suspense. Part African American, part Lakota Sioux, teenager Tommy T. has grown into handsome, successful 30-year-old graphic novelist Thomas Warrior, who lives a fairly solitary existence, talking with his creations Victory and her masculine alter ego, Victor. Then he spots beautiful, wealthy widow Cassandra Westbrook when they bid on the same Native American ledger drawings at an auction, and he is soon persuaded by his adoptive mother, Angela, to mentor Cassandra's talented but misfit nephew, Aaron. There's little doubt from the start about where the Thomas-Cassandra relationship will lead, at least until the novel turns darker when Victor seems to take human form to carry out his creator's wishes, Aaron goes missing, and the issue of trust emerges. Eagle explores problematic family relationships and gives a nod to some contemporary social issues, but she writes primarily to entertain, an aim she achieves here. Michele Leber
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
About the Author
Since the publication of Once Upon a Wedding in hardcover, I've received lots of letters filled with wonderful wedding anecdotes from new brides and mothers of the bride. Most of them want to know just how much of my own daughter's wedding found its way into this book.
Here's the scoop: The devil is in the details. Yes, I said, "Don't spend a lot on a wedding. Put the money toward a house." Yes, I'm cheap. Yes, I'm addicted to E-Bay, and yes, I'm way too hands-on, love to do the craft projects myself -- which doesn't save a penny, but what a sense of satisfaction it gave me. And, yes, my dear friends and in-laws saved the wedding with their late-night stitching in time. Oh, and yes, I did hitch a ride to the church on the bakery truck.
Kathleen Eagle and her husband of thirty-two years make their home in Minnesota. Write to her c/o
Midwest Fiction Writers, P.O. Box 24107,
Minneapolis, MN 55424.
Customer Reviews
Good, not great
Having read about 20 of Kathleen Eagle's books, I was disappointed by this one. The dialog is quite good - an Eagle strong point - but the pendulum swing of emotions is sometimes unbelievable, and not always clearly explained. An enjoyable read, but not destined to be read over and over like her better works (This Time Forever, A Reason to Believe). I wish I had waited for the paperback.
Kathleen Eagle is an author to return to time & again
What the Heart Knows is still my favorite, followed closely by Night Remembers. This book follows and enhances the characters from the previous book. At first I thought I wasn't going to like it because Cassandra didn't trust Thomas. I stuck around to see how that was worked out and fell in love with the book. So, if you're like me and you like those characters built up as solid and stable right from the first, I encourage you to stick around to see how Kathleen Eagle works this out. I can't wait for her next book to get published, so Mrs. Eagle, if you're reading these reviews, hurry up!! While cruising Amazon for books, I did stumble upon Lakota Legacies, which has a short book by Kathleen Eagle. I'm barely into it, but I can already tell it's going to be great! You're safe with this author.
The rare sequel that lives up to the original
This is a sequel to what was possibly Kathleen Eagle's best book. I was nervous about her revisting these characters. This is true to the original and enhances it rather than detracts for it. Tommy T has grown up in to be a man and to have family conflicts firmly rooted in the Tommy T we knew as a child. Never explotative nor preaching about mixed heritage or Native American traditions, the theme of Native American tradition is perfectly used to move the plot forward.
This romance deals deftly with drug use and it's effect on a family, culture clash, age difference in couples, and the bravery it takes to hope. A really fine book well worth buying in hardcover.
