Minnie Hoopes and her trusty horse, Cricket are among the homesteaders racing from Kansas toward Oklahoma in the 1893 land rush. After losing her childhood sweetheart, this capable schoolteacher wants nothing more than to have a plot of land she can call her very own. It is unusual for a woman to be traveling alone; these hills are full of gunslingers, bandits, and renegades. Riding far ahead of her two brothers, no sooner does Minnie stake her claim than she is attacked by two outlaws. So begins life in the Wild West. Her neighbor, “The Lawman,” is probably the most handsome man she has ever known, and the two form a unique bond as they endure the harsh, isolated winter. Minnie and The Lawman assist each other with the physical challenges including building a home, a barn, and digging a well. As Minnie finally opens up to friendship with a nearby family and a Native American neighbor, she continues to be tormented by her past and the crushing disappointment she thought she left behind. Loosely based on the author’s great-great-grandmother, this beautifully written pioneer story is filled with ingenuity, determination, and even a little romance. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

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