Cynthia Woolf Strikes Gold!

Hi everyone,

I don’t know if you know me but I’m Cynthia Woolf. I write historical and contemporary western romance. I have 78 novels so far. 65 historical western romance, mostly mail-order brides and 6 contemporary romances, 2 contemporary western novellas, 2 historical time travel romances featuring angels and a few more stories.

Today I want to talk to you about the Klondike or Yukon Gold Rush. That is where my latest book is set. I also plan on giving away one ebook and one paperback book of The Gold Rush Bride, my latest.

The Klondike Gold Rush was from 1896 to 1899. My books are set in 1898 so basically at the height to the gold rush. It is estimated that about 20,000 men and a few women went north to Alaska and Canada looking for their fortunes. Very few of them actually made a fortune. Most only found enough to pay for their daily needs, if that.

The main town of the rush was Dawson City. It was located at the confluence of the Yukon and Klondike rivers. At the time of my books it was home to about 10,000 men. It was literally wall-to-wall people. The town was made of wood and burned down three times and was built back again.

The route to the gold fields took often six months because it was mostly a foot route. Very few animals made it often dying on the journey over the passes. There were two that were used most prevalently. White Pass and Chilkoot Pass. Chilkoot pass was the one used the most often and is the most famous. Thousands of men started up the pass, some with horses. Hundreds of men and many animals died along the way.

The Klondike Gold fields were in the Canadian Territory. Canada required the rushers to have one year of supplies before they could cross into the Canadian Territory. This was thousands of pounds of equipment and food. The men had to traverse the Chilkoot pass at least twice sometimes three times to get that amount of supplies to the Canadian border. Again, many died on route.

Those that made it were treated to a harsh environment with snow nine months out of the year. Days with only four hours of daylight, so they would have to work by lantern light in the dark. They also had days of twenty hours of daylight and they would work as long as their bodies would let them.

The gold rushers also had to protect their claims from claim jumpers. Men who were too lazy to work their own claims to find gold or had not found any. They would try to take over a producing claim and usually this resulted in death for either the claim jumper or the man whose claim was being jumped upon.

Being a Klondike gold rusher was not for the faint of heart. Most women who managed to make it there ended up working in the brothels though a few worked their claims and some actually found gold.

Here is the blurb for The Gold Rush Bride, so you can see a little bit about and that it intrigues you.

Barnaby Drake made a solemn vow to safeguard Sadie at all costs, honoring a promise to his estranged business partner. However, when Sadie rejects his proposal to acquire her father’s share of the mine, Barnaby realizes there’s only one avenue left to ensure her safety: marriage.

Initially conceived as a practical arrangement devoid of emotional entanglements, the union takes an unforeseen turn. Barnaby finds himself captivated by his newfound wife, her presence dominating his every waking thought. The question lingers: why can’t he suppress the intense desire to possess her completely, both body and soul?

As an impending threat from an old adversary looms, will Barnaby’s overwhelming infatuation cloud his judgment, preventing him from discerning the truth? In this tale of commitment and peril, the boundaries between duty and desire blur, leading to unexpected revelations that could alter their lives forever.

I hope you’ll enjoy reading The Gold Rush Bride.

Would you have been brave enough to journey to the Klondike gold fields? If so, what you you have taken to help you survive? Be sure and leave a comment, winners of the books will be chosen from the comments left. And come by and chat with me. I’d love to talk to you.