The heroine is heart-broken because her beloved mentor is dying and she'll have to leave the ranch once he is gone. Unfortunately, the father has a heart condition and is not expected to live much longer. She has crushed on the hero since her teens and is still on the father's ranch when the story opens. She had been orphaned since age 11 and the hero's father took her in as a foster child. This was another heartfelt, angsty story about a heroine who was mis-judged by the hero and many of the townspeople for her father's drunk driving that killed two teenagers. Susan loves writing complex characters in emotionally intense situations, and hopes her readers enjoy her ranch stories and are uplifted by their happy endings. She has an intense interest in storytelling of all kinds and in politics, and she claims the two are often interchangeable. Susan is a bookaholic and movie fan who loves cowboys, rodeos, and the American West, past and present. She writes with the help and hindrance of five mischievous shorthaired felines: Gabby, a talkative tortoiseshell calico Buster, a solid lion-yellow with white legs and facial markings his sister, Pixie, a tri-color calico Toonses, a plump black-and-white and the cheerily diabolical, naughty black tiger Eddie, aka Eduardo de Lover. Susan has raised two sons, Jeffrey and Patrick, and currently lives in a house that she laughingly refers to as the Landfill and Book Repository. Susan grew up with her sister, Janet, and her brother, Steven, on an acreage near Des Moines, Iowa, where, besides a jillion stray cats and dogs, two horses, and a pony, her favorite pet and confidant was Rex, her brown-and-white pinto gelding. The name needs to be entered with only one space between the first and last name. When entering books for this particular Susan Fox. There is more than one author with this name.
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