
Part of Series
SOUTH DAKOTA'S BLACK HILLS, WHERE FIRES RAGED—AND WHERE ONE WOMAN HAD A FIRE FIGHTER BURNING UP Race Latimer: One of the Forest Service's elite smoke jumpers. Part owner of the Plugged Nickel casino. Half Chippewa Indian. Full-time hell-raiser. Hannah Quinn: Head of self-help program for downtrodden women. Churchgoer. Pint-size blonde with a heart too big for the secret she had to keep. Race Latimer had always drifted from town to town, fire to fire—woman to woman. But suddenly a goody-two-shoes preacher's daughter had him hotter than he'd ever been. Yet the last thing any fire fighter needed was to get burned off duty .... AMERICAN HEROES: Men who give all they've got for their country, their work—the women they love.
Author

Kathleen Eagle published her first book, a Romance Writers of America Golden Heart Award winner, with Silhouette Books in 1984. Since then she has published more than 40 books, including historical and contemporary, series and single title, earning her nearly every award in the industry. Her books have consistently appeared on regional and national bestseller lists, including the USA Today list and the New York Times extended bestseller list. Born in Virginia and raised "on the road" as an Air Force brat, Ms Eagle earned degrees from Mount Holyoke College and Northern State University. She taught at Standing Rock High School in North Dakota for 17 years. Eagle's work is often singled out by book reviewers for its exceptional quality and appeal. THE NIGHT REMEMBERS was a Chicago Tribune Notable Book. SUNRISE SONG, THE NIGHT REMEMBERS, THE LAST TRUE COWBOY, and WHAT THE HEART KNOWS made the Library Journal "Five Best Romances of the Year" list. BookPage listed WHAT THE HEART KNOWS among its "Top Six Romance Picks" for 1999. THE LAST GOOD MAN was a finalist for the 2000 Minnesota Book Award for Popular Fiction—the only Romance so honored thus far. YOU NEVER CAN TELL was named to RWA's "Top Ten Favorite Books of the Year" list. She is an RWA RITA award winner. Kathleen Eagle lives in Minnesota with her husband, who is Lakota Sioux. The Eagles have three children and three grandchildren.