Colorado Wind Books in Order
Part ofDorothy Garlock Books in OrderExplore the Colorado Wind books in order by Dorothy Garlock, with short summaries, series background, and quick tips on the best reading order.
Last updated: June 29, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
Restless Wind
by Dorothy Garlock
1986
Rosalee Spurlock is strong enough for the Colorado mountains, but Logan Horn brings a different kind of challenge to her door. His dark secrets make their fierce attraction as dangerous as it is irresistible.
Wayward Wind
by Dorothy Garlock
1986
Lorna Lightbody rides the Colorado range like it belongs to her because it does. Then she meets Cooper Parnell, a man she cannot outfight, outrun, or forget.
Wind of Promise
by Dorothy Garlock
1987
Vanessa knows Kain DeBolt can protect her from the outlaws waiting on the frontier, but his secrets are another danger entirely. Garlock gives their romance real western bite and momentum.
Series background & context
The Colorado Wind books are high-country historical romances with a little more legend and family inheritance woven through them than in some of Dorothy Garlock's other western series. The sequence includes Wayward Wind, Restless Wind, and Wind of Promise. Read together, the books create a rugged mountain world where old reputations matter, independence comes at a price, and love has to prove itself against secrecy and danger.
These stories are built around strong heroines and men who arrive with shadows attached. In Restless Wind, Rosalee Spurlock is more than capable of meeting frontier danger on her own, which makes Logan Horn's arrival as much an emotional problem as a practical one. Wayward Wind brings in Lorna Lightbody and Cooper Parnell, tying romance to family legend and the pull of a mountain inheritance. Wind of Promise keeps that same western intensity, pairing desire with real threat on unsettled ground.
The landscape has a will of its own.
Colorado matters here as more than a postcard backdrop. Garlock uses mountains, weather, distance, and isolation to shape every relationship. People in these books cannot simply walk away from trouble and disappear into a crowd. They are bound to cabins, trails, small towns, and long memories. That makes conflicts feel sharper. Pride lasts longer. Feuds travel farther. So does longing.
There is also a slightly more romantic, almost mythic streak in this series, especially around family stories and the idea of a place carrying emotional history forward. That does not make the books soft. Garlock still gives readers outlaws, secrets, violence, and hard choices. But she balances that with a feeling that certain people are drawn together by something bigger than convenience.
If you want western romance with mountain atmosphere, stubborn characters, and a strong sense of inherited place, the Colorado Wind books are worth your time. They have the toughness Garlock brings to her frontier work, but also a more intimate, windblown mood that suits stories about people trying to decide whether love is freedom, risk, or both at once.
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