
Kentucky Heat
Nealy Coleman Trilogy, Book 2
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

Fiercely independent and loyal to her family, Nealy Coleman is certainly a woman to be reckoned with. Narrator Laural Merlington performs the heroine with energy and depth and gives her a perfectly sultry Kentucky drawl. Merlington's range is also tested with a wide range of characters from Nealy Coleman's ranch, business associates, and extended family. Merlington passes this test with flying colors as she individualizes each character with different tones and inflections. After 11 hours of listening, this reviewer was sad to hear the story end and hopes that Merlington will perform the next installment in this family saga. K.M.D. (c) AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine

April 8, 2002
Building on the success of her Vegas
and Texas
series, Michaels (Kentucky Rich) enlarges the Coleman and Thornton family legacies in her second novel set in bluegrass country. The indomitable Nealy Coleman Diamond Clay has her hands full: the foal that carries her hopes for the Triple Crown is born early while her grown children and helpmeets are away. When they return with news (her son has eloped with the family's cook and her daughter's husband abandoned her on a cruise) Nealy is furious—as far as she's concerned, they were due home a week ago. "The horses always first," sighs daughter Emmie. The multiple catastrophes strain plausibility, but the stalwart Michaels, whose plots are chock-full of dramatic tension, knows how to pull off the impossible. Nealy meets her match in her late husband's former law partner, Hatch Littletree, a larger-than-life Native American whose physical magnitude and considerable wealth is matched by his big heart and largess. The internecine family feuds, present and past—not to mention the author's compulsion to fill in the blanks about the Thorntons and Colemans and their stormy histories—takes away from the larger story about the developing relationship between Nealy and Hatch, and her endeavors toward a second Triple Crown sweep. In addition, a subplot involving a potential movie about Nealy's life (introduced in a rambling prologue and inexplicably ignored for over 200 pages) fails miserably. The brisk narrative also goes awry when a sudden cataclysm following a thrilling race victory robs the climax of its punch, dragging out the final section of the book to its inevitable happy conclusion. National advertising.
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