
Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.
Enter a zip code
(Paperback)
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| Available in eBook | $11.16 |
| Paperback - Bargain | $4.98 |
Big Lizard Bottoms-where getting hitched is a local industry-is not any place Lindsey Attwood, a play-it-safe paleontologist who's sworn off romance, ever expected to find herself. She's here posing as a horse psychology student to help recover dinosaur tracks stolen from a local guest ranch. After only a day at the ranch, things start spiraling out of control. Her horse-therapy horse hates her, she's been adopted by a huge stray dog with a bad reputation, and there's this local rancher who has her all moonstruck. After years of digging around in the past, Lindsey's wondering if it's finally time to see what the present has to offer.
When eight-year-old Sydney leaves Denver to spend the summer in Mexico with her estranged father, Geoff, at the start of this third novel in Wingate's Texas Hill Country series, her mother, divorced paleontologist Lindsey Attwood, doesn't quite know what to do with herself. At the behest of her twin sister, Laura, and girlfriend Collie Collins (the protagonist of the series' first novel, Texas Cooking), Lindsey finds herself in San Saline, Tex., helping solve a mystery of missing dinosaur tracks on a local ranch while posing as a member of a horse psychology class. Lindsey falls for veterinarian-turned-cowboy Zach Truitt, and as their romance blooms, she wrestles with the problems that consume her: faith, fear and doubts about her ability to love again. Of course, in the end, the horse psychology class actually teaches Lindsey a thing or two-she conquers her fear of horses, makes peace with her ex-husband, solves the dinosaur case and learns to both accept and revel in her new relationship. Wingate attempts to mesh mystery with romance, but with slapdash writing and flat characters, her latest novel comes up short of her previous books' sincerity and warmth. Agent, Claudia Cross. (Nov.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsReader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
March 14, 2006: I am a definite Lisa Wingate fan. Her books are funny, sweet, romantic without being graphic, and filled with uplifting observations about life and relationships. Big Lizard Diner is as good as all the rest. It draws you in and takes you on a journey, then leaves you feeling warm and satisfied. I hated to see it end!
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
February 17, 2006: If you love a great story with fun, quirky characters, you'll love this book. Not only was it a great read, but the story also contains many enlightening moments, as Lindsey slowly learns to stop being ruled by fear and begins to live a bold, out-there life. Overall, this is a book you should not miss. The first I've read by Lisa Wingate, but it won't be my last!