![]() The two are almost instantly drawn to one another, but John knows falling for a white woman isn’t smart.Īs time passes and life on the trail becomes ever more perilous, both John and Naomi struggle with the strength of their feelings and wonder if they will ever be able to act on them. ![]() He takes a job escorting a wagon train to Oregon, never dreaming he’d meet a woman as strong, resourceful, beautiful, and kind as Naomi May. The son of a white man and a Pawnee woman, he feels adrift no matter where he lives, unable to fit into either world. John Lowry has never felt at home anywhere. Plus, with her family also planning to set up a homestead, life back east doesn’t hold much appeal for her. ![]() Her late husband always wanted to claim land out west, and now that he’s gone, Naomi feels this is the best way to honor his memory. Widowed Naomi May is traveling west with her parents and younger brothers in the spring of 1853. Where the Lost Wander filled me with all manner of nostalgia for those early romance-reading days, while managing to be a fantastic love story in its own right. However, when I learned that Amy Harmon, one of my very favorite authors, was coming out with a new novel about a wagon train on the Overland Trail, I knew I had to read it. Western romances used to be a staple of my reading life, but over the past several years, I’ve kind of drifted away from them. ![]()
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