Tag: Historical

Guest Review: A Duke’s Desire by Liz Cole

Guest Review: A Duke’s Desire by Liz Cole

Tracy’s review of A Duke’s Desire by Liz Cole Anna Carrington is no longer a child, but a marriageable young woman who has loved the Duke of Fairmount for years. She has kept her love for him well hidden, sure that even if, by some miracle, he did return her feelings, his dedication to propriety […]

Guest Review: The Rake and the Recluse by Jenn LeBlanc

Guest Review: The Rake and the Recluse by Jenn LeBlanc

Tracy’s review of The Rake and the Recluse by Jenn LeBlanc The Lady in Question Francine Larrabee woke up on the wrong side of the century. She was fairly certain she went to sleep in her own comfy bed, but she doesn’t quite seem to be there now. Only adding to her problems is that […]

Review: Rules of an Engagement by Suzanne Enoch

Review: Rules of an Engagement by Suzanne Enoch

Holly‘s review of Rules of an Engagement (Adventurer’s Club, Book 3) by Suzanne Enoch For proper young ladies, good behavior has always been the rule… Captain Bradshaw Carroway loves the seafaring life—though he’d rather be battling brigands than his current assignment of ferrying a boatload of spoiled aristocrats. One passenger, however, has caught his eye: […]

Guest Review: The Wicked Wyckerly by Patricia Rice

Guest Review: The Wicked Wyckerly by Patricia Rice

Judith‘s review of The Wicked Wyckerly (The Rebellious Sons, Book 1) by Patricia Rice. John Fitzhugh Wyckerly has never relied on his family for love or money.  Handsome, charming, and a genius with numbers, he wins enough money gambling to allow himself the pretense of luxury and indolence expected of an aristocrat’s younger son.  But […]

Review: A Lady’s Guide to Improper Behavior by Suzanne Enoch

Review: A Lady’s Guide to Improper Behavior by Suzanne Enoch

Holly‘s review of A Lady’s Guide to Improper Behavior (Adventurer’s Club, Book 2) by Suzanne Enoch The Rules: A lady should always make polite conversation . . . Theresa Weller understands the rules of decorum, and is appalled when Colonel Bartholomew James disrupts a perfectly civilized dinner. This rude, insensitive man is the complete opposite […]