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Cowboys, guitar chords, and a past full of crazy.
If she’s not careful, Maggie’s old junk may wreck her new life.
“Maggie’s gonna break your heart—one way or another.” —Tara Scheyer, Grammy-nominated musician, Long-Distance Sisters Book Club
These three novels from USA Today Bestseller Pamela Fagan Hutchins have 220 reviews and a 4.4-star average. Available in digital, print, and audiobook.
Live Wire
Washed-up alt-country-rocker-turned-junker Maggie Killian is pulled to Wyoming by an irresistible force . . . former bull rider Hank Sibley, the man who broke her heart fifteen years before. When she unexpectedly meets his Sunday school-teaching girlfriend at a saloon, Maggie seeks liquor-fueled oblivion between the sheets of a younger man’s bed. But after her beloved vintage truck breaks down and leaves her stranded in the Cowboy State, she learns her hook-up died minutes after leaving their rendezvous. Suddenly surrounded by men with questionable motives, Maggie searches for the murderer while fighting the electricity between herself and her old beau and her new penchant for local whiskey.
Sick Puppy
Maggie tucks tail back to Texas with Louise, the mutt Hank foisted on her in Wyoming. Maggie runs straight to Gary Fuller—her long time best friend-with-benefits and the biggest Texas country music star since George Strait—but arrives too late to save him from dying in a fire. She just wants to lick her wounds in her own bed with nothing save a bottle for comfort, but Maggie’s short term renter refuses to budge from her home. Soon her small town sanctuary is overrun with Nashville bigwigs, Gary’s trailer park family, and grief-crazed fans feeding the fires of media speculation about the bodies in her wake.
Dead Pile
After Maggie Killian’s junker business goes to crap in Texas, she packs up her vintage truck and rescue mutt for Wyoming and a sexy reunion with her ex. When she discovers Hank’s foreman unceremoniously dumped on the ranch’s dead pile—the repository for deceased livestock—deputies look no further than the ranch for suspects, especially the young Amish hand, Andy, Maggie’s guitar protégé.
“Hutchins nails that Wyoming scenery and captures the atmosphere of the people there.” —Ken Oder, author of The Judas Murders
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