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Preface
by Mary Kirk
What true-blue romance fan can resist a wounded hero?
Certainly, none that I know.
Through the pages of some of the genre's most
memorable "classics," we've cried as he struggled with the
demons plaguing him from both without and within, at the
same time he went on searching for peace, freedom, or
simply a home. The wounded hero holds a special place in
our hearts, and nothing gives us greater satisfaction than
seeing that brave man find peace and happiness--and the
love of his life, as well.
The Journey Home is about the wounded hero. The man who
does what he must. The soldier who risks his life for his
beliefs, his family, his country. The warrior who gives his
all for a cause. It's about the man who goes to war and
discovers, when it's over, that he's a different man--and,
maybe, that he isn't certain who or what he's become.
It's also about the woman who loves such a man: the one who
waits at home, worrying, wondering. When her man finally
returns, will her love be enough to heal the invisible
wounds of combat? Will he even recognize the stranger
sleeping alongside him at night?
Whether victors or vanquished, all survivors of a conflict
must face the aftermath. But where do battle-scarred and
world-weary warriors go to lick their wounds and to heal?
How do they come to grips with what they've done and with
what's been done to them? Will they--can they--return to
hearth and home? Or are they destined to live in painful
isolation, unable to find a woman brave enough to love a
man whose heart has been shattered?
The award-winning, best-selling authors of The Journey Home
have created a wonderfully romantic collection of tales
about wounded heroes who find healing love in unexpected--
and strangely uncanny--ways and places.
In Patricia Rice's "Home is Where the Heart Is,"
Thomas
returns from Vietnam missing part of his foot, bringing
with him the ghost of his best friend--and hardly daring to
hope that his anti-war, high-school sweetheart will still
love him.
Rebecca York's ("A Hero's Welcome") rebel Ben
Linkman won a
hero's boon, helping his enslaved people rise up and take
control of their Earth-colonized planet. He now owns a
confiscated plantation. But nobody except Kasi, daughter of
his former master, can give him what he wants most: her
heart.
Lying ill unto death in a Union prison, Jared, in Rickey
R.
Mallory's "A Better Man," has given up hope, when he's
rescued by his brother, an officer in the Confederate army.
Rob leads Jared home, leaving him at the doorstep,
unconscious. But six days later, when Jared awakens, he
learns Rob has been dead for months . . . and Christianne,
his brother's widow, whom Jared has loved in silence since
childhood, is ready to love again.
To honor a promise to his twin sister, Brian Mason
(Linda
Madl's "Heart Crossings") asks psychic medium Amanda
Sherman to help him contact his sister on "the other side."
But Amanda knows it's Brian own grieving, cynical soul that
needs to be contacted--and brought back from the Great War
and the trenches of France to the land of the living . . .
if only he'll trust her to help him.
Then, in "The Stargazer's Familiar," Mary Jo Putney
has
created a hero who . . . well . . . actually, no, I don't
think I'll tell you. I'll let you find out for yourself
about the handsome and intriguing Leo--and about all the
other wonderful wounded heroes in The Journey Home.
From the Wars of the Roses to the American Revolution, from
The Great War of the twentieth century to a battle for
control of an Earth-colonized planet, you'll find in these
pages glimpses into the souls of a few good men and the
women who love them. Their passionate stories reveal that,
no matter the place, the time, or the reason, war scars
those who engage in it. And when the last shot is fired,
the hero's struggle to reclaim his humanity--and his heart--
may only just have begun.
SummarySoldier, Warrior, Rebel . . .
The award-winning, best-selling authors of The Journey
Home have conjured an inspired collection of short stories
about the most compelling figure in romantic fiction: the
wounded hero. In each passionate and magical tale,
you’ll meet an irresistible warrior who's facing the
aftermath of a conflict. You'll meet, too, the
courageous woman who wants to tend his wounds, help him
rebuild his shattered dreams, and give him the love he
needs and so richly deserves"if only he will let her.
Ten romantic encounters of the extraordinary kind, each
proving what the heart knows is true" that the most
powerful healer . . . in any time or place . . . was, is,
and always will be love.
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