Tag: Judith’s Reviews

Guest Review: How To Tame Your Duke by Juliana Gray.

Guest Review: How To Tame Your Duke by Juliana Gray.

Judith’s review of How To Tame Your Duke by Juliana Gray. England, 1888. Quiet and scholarly Princess Emilie has always avoided adventure, until she’s forced to disguise herself as a tutor in the household of the imposing Duke of Ashland, a former soldier disfigured in battle and abandoned by his wife. When chance draws her into […]

Guest Review: The Lady and the Laird by Nicola Cornick

Guest Review:  The Lady and the Laird by Nicola Cornick

Judith’s review of The Lady and the Laird by Nicola Cornick Lady Lucy MacMorlan may have forsworn men and marriage, but that doesn’t mean she won’t agree to profit from writing love letters for her brother’s friends – letters that become increasingly racy as her fame grows. That is, until she deliberately ruins the betrothal of […]

Guest Review: Big Sky Summer by Linda Lael Miller

Guest Review: Big Sky Summer by Linda Lael Miller

Judith’s review of Big Sky Summer (Swoon-Worthy Cowboys #4) by Linda Lael Miller  With his father’s rodeo legacy to continue and a prosperous spread to run, Walker Parrish has no time to dwell on wrecked relationships. But country-western sweetheart Casey Elder is out of the spotlight and back in Parable, Montana. And Walker can’t ignore that his […]

Guest Review: How to Lose a Bride in One Night by Sophie Jordan

Guest Review: How to Lose a Bride in One Night by Sophie Jordan

Sophie Jordan is one of those historical romance writers that just seems to hit a home run most of the time.  Her literary batting average is right up there and she has done it again . . . written a story that is creative and different yet is filled with the color and pageantry that […]

Guest Review: And Then She Fell by Stephanie Laurens

Guest Review: And Then She Fell by Stephanie Laurens

Ms Laurens has again gifted her reading public with a historical romance that continues the reader’s involvement with the Cynster group, and in this story there is a very different kind of character featured as the heroine.  It is almost as if Henrietta is an anti-heroine, a woman who really never sees herself as a […]