Tag: Reprints

Guest Review: A Christmas Kiss by Elizabeth Mansfield

Posted October 14, 2016 by Tracy in Reviews | 0 Comments

Guest Review: A Christmas Kiss by Elizabeth MansfieldReviewer: Tracy
A Christmas Kiss by Elizabeth Mansfield
Publisher: Open Road Media Romance
Publication Date: October 4th 2016
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three-stars

During the holiday season, a governess loses her heart to an earl with no intention of marrying again, in this Cinderella story set in Regency England.

After defending her virtue by striking the besotted son of her employer, Miss Evalyn Pennington is discharged from her position under a cloud of scandal. With no place to go and no prospects for the coming year, the impoverished governess accepts an invitation from Jamie Everard, heir to an earldom, to spend the holidays at his family’s estate. But Evalyn has barely settled in at Gyllford Manor when she catches the eye of Philip Everard, the fourth Earl of Gyllford—and Jamie’s father.

After his wife died, Philip vowed to never marry again, despite his sister’s best efforts to reintroduce him to London society. Then, his son brings a guest home for Christmas. Is the lovely, intelligent Evalyn the woman to make his footloose son settle down at last? But why does Jamie treat Evalyn in such a cavalier manner? And what is Philip to do about the reigning beauty of London who has set her cap for him—and is about to set in motion a scheme that will have far-reaching consequences for them all?

A witty and warm tale about morals, mores, marriage, and mistaken intentions, this classic Regency holiday romance introduces a woman who refuses to surrender her ideals, and a man in danger of losing the one thing he swore never again to give: his heart.

Evalyn Pennington is let go from her position of governess after she is accosted by her employer’s son.  (Yeah, doesn’t make sense to me either.) Two of the son’s friends, Jamie and Reggie, are in residence when this happens and feels bad that she got sacked without a reference because of their friends’ stupidity.  They make a plan to take Evalyn to Jamie’s house for Christmas thinking that Jamie’s aunt will get to know her, like her, and then be willing to give her a letter of reference.  He writes to his father and aunt and they agree to let her be their guest thinking that Jamie has finally found someone he’s fond of.

When Jamie gets to Gyllford Manor and talks to his father, Philip, he hems and haws about why Evalyn is there and by the end of the talk Philip is under the impression that after Christmas Jamie and Evalyn will be announcing their engagement. Philip and his sister are thrilled but then Philip gets to know Evalyn and realizes that he’s having feelings for her.  He’s a widower and hasn’t had feelings for anyone since his wife died so it’s strange.  Of course he feels immense guilt because she’s Jamie’s woman.

The story is a mish-mosh of misunderstandings, love growing between various couples and of course a plot to discredit someone.  It was a bit confusing at times but all in good fun and it definitely made me laugh from time to time.

Evalyn was a sensible woman but still had a romantic heart.  She, of course, had no clue that Philip was under the impression that she was going to marry Jamie so when it seems he has feelings for her and then pushes her away, she’s confused.

Then there’s Reggie, Jamie’s friend, who starts to fall for the daughter of another house guest but he thinks that Jamie has his eye on her and refuses to infringe.

Of course the aunt has a love interest as well and it all makes for a very interesting holiday for the family and their guests.  I did find the story to be very light and airy, despite some of the misunderstandings.  It was all in good fun and was well done.

Rating: 3 out of 5

(Originally released in 1990)

three-stars


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Guest Review: The Hypnotist’s Love Story by Liane Moriarty

Posted December 10, 2013 by Natalia S in Reviews | 0 Comments

Publisher: Berkley, Penguin

The Hypnotist's Love StoryNatalia’s review of The Hypnotist’s Love Story by Liane Moriarty

Ellen O’Farrell is an expert when it comes to human frailties. She’s a hypnotherapist who helps her clients deal with everything from addictions to life-long phobias. So when she falls in love with a man who is being stalked by his ex-girlfriend she’s more intrigued than frightened. What makes a supposedly smart, professional woman behave this way? She’d love to meet her!

What she doesn’t know is that she already has. Saskia has been masquerading as a client, and their lives are set to collide in ways Ellen could never have predicted.

This wonderfully perceptive new novel from Liane Moriarty is about the lines we’ll cross for love. It’s about the murky areas between right and wrong, and the complexities of modern relationships.

Recently, I’ve been looking in to hypnosis and how it works. I find it a great subject, and was curious to read about a fictitious aspect of it. Especially if it was written by Liane Moriarty, who has a knack for capturing the heart of the matter. I’m sure we all had one boyfriend that we cyber stalked in some way when we were teens. What happens when you bring that sort of behavior in to adulthood? This was such a complex plot. I can’t imagine what I’d do if my current boyfriend was a widower, and on top of that had a stalker x girlfriend? Sounds like way too much for anyone to handle. However, this book wasn’t that black and white.

Liane Moriarty has a way of making us see in to the deepest part of each and every character, and relating to all of them in some way. Even when they are doing things you’ve never dreamed of.

I really liked the characters in this book. I liked how smart and patient Ellen was. I loved her open mind, and willingness to learn about anything to do with people. I enjoyed seeing her grow as a character throughout the book. I commend the author for her research on the hypnosis process. There are many myths about hypnotherapy. It was nice to see that even though I was reading fiction, the aspects were realistic.  It definitely made me understand Ellen better as a person. For me, her story capitalized on how important the balance between our intellect and our emotions is.

Believe it or not, I loved Saskia. In spite of the crazy things she was doing, it was so easy to empathize with her situation and feelings. I believe if they didn’t have Patrick in common, she and Ellen could’ve been great friends.

I’m not sure how I feel about Patrick overall. I’m thinking he’s nice enough, but I didn’t like him very much at first. I felt that he was still grieving for his wife, and never actually allowed himself to grieve over her properly. I also hated his constant mood swings. Most importantly though, I didn’t see the chemistry between Patrick and Ellen. I could see why he loved her but not why she loved him. Maybe it’s just me though. In the end, he did redeem himself a bit in my eyes and I started to like him more.

I’m always happy to pick up a book by this author. I know that I will find witty relateable characters, a good story to get lost in, and some important lessons about life. I’m happy to note that there are still a few books by her I haven’t read. Looking forward to them

Grade: 4.5 stars

 

This title is available from Berkley Trade (reprint edition).  You can purchase the book here or here in e-format.  This book was provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.


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Guest Review: Wildest Heart by Virginia Brown

Posted June 22, 2013 by Judith in Reviews | 0 Comments

Guest Review:  Wildest Heart by Virginia BrownReviewer: Judith
Wildest Heart (To Love an Outlaw #2) by Virginia Brown
Series: To Love an Outlaw #2
Publisher: Zebra
Publication Date: February 1st 1994
Genres: Historical Romance
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four-half-stars
Series Rating: five-stars

DRIVEN BY REVENGE

Scarred by his shadowy past, Devon Conrad was the deadliest gunman in the west ... haunted by desperate memories of one woman even as he was irresistibly drawn to another...

BRILLIANT AND BEAUTIFUL

Maggie Malone had come to cattle country to forge her future as a healer. Now she faced an outlaw wounded in body and soul ... a seductive rebel whose eyes blazed with fury even as his burning caress sent her spiraling into the darkness of her deepest desires...

WILDEST HEART

They came together in the heat of a Texas town about to explode in sin and scandal. Danger was their destiny -- and there was nothing they wouldn't dare for love...

Lovers of historical romance fiction set in the 19th century American West will be delighted that Bell Bridge books have seen fit to re-release this Virginia Brown novel, first released in 1994. Devon’s story really begins in book one of this series where he and his sister known then as Colorado Kate formed the Lost Canyon Gang with their other riders, robbing trains in order to gain revenge on the man who had murdered their parents and stolen their father’s mine. Now Devon wanders the Western reaches of the American territories, known as one of the fastest guns for hire, rumored to be a man without conscience, no roots, and little interest in anyone but himself. Few realize that he carries with him an old but as-yet unhealed wound, deeply grieving the death of his young wife of only a few weeks at the hand of the very man who killed his parents. It is in pursuit of another lawless and greedy man that Devon is gravely injured and thus comes into the small and new medical practice of Dr. Maggie Malone.

This novel tells the story of a woman who is not interested in being a society grande dame, carefully sitting in her spotless parlor, drinking tea out of fragile bone china cups. She is a woman who wants to amount to something and one who makes a difference in a world where women are little more than brood mares and who exist to do the super duper pooper scooping of the world. (Not a lot has changes in some ways, eh?) She is doing so in spite of her brother’s continuous objections, a man with a temper, a rather exaggerated sense of his own importance and one who has yet to appreciate the grace and intelligence of his sister. He is especially upset when he finds out that Maggie has been treating Devon, that her patient has been staying in her little house as he is being cared for. And throughout this novel it becomes patently obvious that John Malone is not a deep thinker, that he is driven by his own ideas and prejudices, and cares little for the opinions of others, least of all a woman even though she may be his sister.

Thus, these two people, both of whom are living on the edges of polite society, find each other. Their relationship is flawed and troubled, by Maggie’s insistence on honesty and openness, by Devon’s persistent routine of just showing up, spending time with her, and then disappearing. She knows he has some painful secrets and that no matter how generous her love, Devon won’t allow himself to believe that there is ever the possibility that love and joy can be a part of his future. When Maggie’s brother forces them into a true shotgun wedding, an event that he has manipulated with lies and deceit, it appears that any chance for Devon and Maggie’s future together is over and done. Throw in some really evil plotters, rustlers, an angry fiance, and you have a colorful, rip-snorter of a novel that will be a sure fire winner all around.

I know there are many who think reading romance novels is the stuff empty headed women indulge in for lack of anything worthwhile to do. Yet here there is a lot to learn and lessons that are taught in the lives of these fictional characters, wisdom shared through the voice of an Apache renegade, “ah-ha” moments that are critical to the story, and visits with characters from the previous novel. Most of all, I think one of the important lessons here is that “no man is an island” and that there is no pain too deep, no wound too profound, that the redeeming power of love and authentic caring cannot heal.

I am so glad this novel and the one before it have been released. I think you will be glad you experienced it. I give it a rating of 4.5 out of 5.

The Series:

Book Cover Book Cover

You can read more from Judith at Dr J’s Book Place.

This book is available from Bell Bridge Books. You can buy it here or here in e-format. This book was provided by the publisher for an honest review.

four-half-stars


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Guest Review: The Bewitched Viking by Sandra Hill

Posted September 2, 2012 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 1 Comment

Publisher: Avon, Harper Collins

Judith’s review of The Bewitched Viking by Sandra Hill.

BEWITCHED, BOTHERED, AND BEWILDERED …

Even fierce Norse warriors have bad days. Holy Thor! ‘Twas enough to drive a sane Viking mad, the things Tykir Thorksson was forced to do — capturing a redheaded virago, putting up with the flock of sheep that followed her everywhere, chasing off her bumbling brothers. But what could a man expect from the sorceress who had put a kink in the King of Norway’s most precious body part?

If that wasn’t bad enough, his own skald was putting Tykir’s embarrassing escapades into sagas for all posterity to laugh about. And he was beginning to realize he wasn’t at all immune to the enchantment of brash red hair and freckles.

But he was not called Tykir the Great for nothing. Perhaps he could reverse the spell and hold her captive, not with his mighty sword, but with a Viking man’s greatest magic: a wink and a smile.

He was sent to fetch a witch . . . at least everyone thought she was a witch because Tykir’s king had a problem, a really distressing problem with his most precious male part, a part that had kind of a right turn in its length. She was the sorceress that had mumbled a “curse” on him when she caught him ravaging a nun, and now he wanted that curse removed. So a mighty warrior who was also a merchant and reknown purveyor of amber has been sent to take her into custody. Alinor was not beautiful, in fact she thought herself cursed as well with hair so read it nearly glowed in the dark and she had more than her share of freckles, a condition that was believed to be cause by the evil one. (As a redhead I would have agreed, especially in my younger years) But things never really seem to go smoothly for Tykir the Great — as his friend and fellow warrior Bolthor styled him. Not only did he have to contend with Alinor, he had to contend with her sheep as well. In addition, she had a bevy of greedy and controlling brothers, all of whom she wanted to avoid so that she could control her own life. Needless to say, this basic story line developed into a tale that was as laced with fun and humor as it was with passion and politics.

Sandra Hill has written this extensive series as an attempt to redeem much that is erroneously believed about the Vikings. First published a decade ago, the books have been redone and re-released by Avon Books and are a joy to read. A number of characters are carry-overs from the previous books. Tykir himself first appeared in book one with his brother, both of whom were having a very difficult time relating to their father who was trying to protect them from being killed by jealous royal relatives. Now he is a man with his own life, his business, and with a rather significant plate full of troubles.

I have really enjoyed reading through this series and I would recommend that readers start with the first book. It is historical fiction that is charming and funny, intense and sometimes erotic, full of believable characters and all of it interwoven with the difficult and often misunderstood politics of that Medieval Period. It is an insightful look at the culture clashes that made life difficult for all the citizens of the British Isles and which erupted often in armed warfare. Yet in the midst of all the push pull of greed and political machinations are people who love and care and get caught up in real life difficulties. Now the problem with the king’s most private part certainly gives spice and humor to the story, the dialogue and the overall context of Tykir’s & Alinor’s story. Suffice it to say that some of the funniest parts are the ridiculous and sometimes insightful but always humorous “sagas” or poems composed on the spot by Tykir’s friend, Bolthor the Skald, a gentle giant and loyal friend, one who no one would think of hurting or injuring his spirit.

So if you have a chance or the inclination to read a really delightful historical romance, latch on to this one. It is beautifully written, well-researched, and will be entertaining from page one.

I give it a rating of 4 out of 5

You can read more from Judith at Dr J’s Book Place.

This book is available from Avon. You can buy it here or here in e-format.


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Guest Review: The Tarnished Lady by Sandra Hill

Posted August 29, 2012 by Book Binge Guest Blogger in Reviews | 0 Comments

Publisher: Avon, Harper Collins

Judith’s review of The Tarnished Lady (Viking I series #3) by Sandra Hill

Disgraced!

Banished from polite society for bearing a child out of wedlock, Lady Eadyth of Hawks’ Lair spends her days hidden under
a voluminous veil, tending her bees. But when her son’s detested father threatens to reveal the boy’s true paternity and seize her beloved lands, Lady Eadyth seeks a husband willing to claim the child as his own.

Eirik of Ravenshire is England’s most virile bachelor, notorious for loving—and leaving— the most beautiful damsels in the land. Now a mysterious lady is offering him a vow of chaste matrimony in exchange for revenge against his most hated enemy, and Eirik simply cannot refuse. But the lusty knight’s plans go awry when he finds himself unable to resist Eadyth’s myriad charms…and he succumbs to the sweet sting of the tarnished lady’s love.


Life has never been easy for women:  the super dooper pooper scoopers of the human race.  They are left to pick up the pieces of destroyed relationships and families, raise abandoned children, have their dignity and personhood made into something that is merely a political pawn in men’s power games, or who must take extreme measures to protect themselves and those they love.  So it was in the 10th century in Britain, a land that was being pulled hither and yon by Saxons, Celts, the Irish and Welsh, as well as the Vikings from the North countries.  Eirik was half Saxon and half Viking, but he had been raised/fostered under the tutelage of the Saxon king so had more power than some in negotiating settlements between Saxon and Viking protagonists.  He had been at war for his king for years, and it was only a little while after arriving home, seeing the neglect and decay he had allowed by his absence, when he was verbally assaulted by Lady Eadyth of Hawk’s Lair with a ridiculous offer of marriage.  Eadyth was unmarried and unlikely to find a husband unless she managed that on her own.  And Eirik was overtly uninterested until Eadyth informed him that the person she most feared was Eirik’s greatest enemy.  THEN he listened to her proposal, and even though she had styled herself as an elderly lady, there was  much fun to be had as the surprises were unveiled and the true nature of many things became apparent.  
This was the first book in this series I read even though it is really Book Three in the series.  I was so delighted with it that I went back and read the first two before moving on to the later novels.  Eadyth was a woman of great industry, a wonderful business manager and a creative one to boot.  It was a marvelous part of the book to watch Eirik discover who his wife really was, the depth of her character and honor, the wounds she carried because of the selfish and cruel acts of his enemy, and the dimensions of her ability to love, not only her son but Eirik’s two illegitimate daughters.  He was a man who had experienced early life being ignored by his father and shuttled from one abode to the next.  When Eadyth opened her heart to his motherless daughters it brought something to life in him and their love story became far more intense, hot, and vibrant.
Like all the books in this series this novel can be read alone.  I certainly had no difficulty appreciating it even though I had not read the first two books.  It is a wonderful “window” into the life and ways of the Vikings, a culture that is greatly misunderstood because of many errors in our history books.  They were certainly not pacifists, but then few people in that time could afford to be.  Yet they were merchants, traders, artisans, family people, and men and women of deep loyalty.  So I hope those who really like a historical full of love and adventure will take the time to read this book which is now re-released and updated by the author.  It is well worth the time and effort and may actually get you to look for the other books in this series.  (You may find older versions at your library with different covers.)

I give this novel a 4 out of 5

The Series:

Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover

You can read more from Judith at Dr J’s Book Place.

This book is available from Avon. You can buy it here or here in e-format.


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