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Indigo Blue
  

Indigo Blue (Mass Market Paperback)

by Catherine Anderson (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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3 used from CDN$ 42.10

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When Jake Rand arrives to work in her family's mine, Indigo Wolf, a free and proud woman, realizes that perhaps this is the man for her.

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3.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Strays from its origin. 3.5 Stars., Feb 7 2004
By MaryGrace Meloche (Ontario, Canada.) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Catherine Anderson provides a travel visa, whenever I pick up one of her novels. This author's location sketches are excellent. Her character development is exceptional, and immediately, her reader is hooked into her provocative storylines. Usually, this author's heroines are survivors from some inflicted misery. "Indigo Blue" is no departure from the Anderson blueprint.

The heroine is Indigo Wolf, her misery -- a violent attack by teenage boys. She carries around enough sexual hang-ups to last a woman nineteen million life spans. However, I am a big Anderson fan, and I read Indigo's father's story in "Comanche Moon". In that book, Hunter of the Wolf, was a powerful, intense Comanche warrior. To think he would allow a group of teenage boys to assault his daughter sexually and then get away with it - well -- IT WOULD NOT HAPPEN!!

I read this book with eagerness. The death of Indigo's pet is heart wrenching material, and Anderson's portrayal of racial prejudice is insightful and direct; the power of hate and ridicule is eye opening. Although Anderson draws a touching story, I was still frustrated with Indigo's sexual obstacles, this continuous abstraction results in the novel's "bog down". This is a good book, but it could have been better.

Grace Atkinson, Ontario - Canada.

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