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Reviewed by Dr. Karen Hutchins Pirnot for Readers' Favorite
Elizabeth Einspanier likes to dabble in merging various genres and she has pulled off a great one in Sheep's Clothing. Salvation is a town of 200 people and they desperately need a doctor. When Doc Meadows elects to serve the town, he has little notion of just what his "service" entails. Wolf Cowrie struggles into Salvation with a silver blade in his body and he and Doc Meadows form an unlikely alliance that will test the boundaries of time, friendship and ideas. Cowrie is after a man named Russeau who allegedly stole Cowrie’s wife and ran away with her. Now Cowrie is out to make things right. But it's not a simple case of stolen wife syndrome. Russeau has an ancient secret and Cowrie will not rest until he destroys the man and gives his wife peace.
Doc Meadows is a fully likeable and believable fellow and, strangely, so is Wolf Cowrie. Einspanier has combined the Old West with vampire tales and has meshed them into a thoroughly delightful tale of love, commitment, tall tales and romance. Sheep's Clothing offers simple but deep characters who understand an unbelievable situation and they act according to right and wrong. Doc Meadow's aim is to save a town he has grown to love. Wolf's motivation is to take a series of wrongs and try to bring a sense of justice to a situation not of his making. This is both a great western story and a vampire story. Who would have thought such a combination could even approach a feeling of believability?