Harry Blackwood comes to London to return a portrait to Louisa Devereaux. Unfortunately, he cannot as she has recently died. Instead, he returns it to her daughter Christina who has taken over the male brothel her mother owned. Both are attracted to the other. Christina asks him to take her to a bal...
While I'm not sure such a thing can exist, I would describe Slowly Fell as a cozy Gothic tale. There's all the earmarks of a Victorian Gothic: lost babes and a crumbling manse, witches and curses, consumption, murder and missing persons. But the central character of the novel, Sarah Wetherby, is suc...
This book deserves a great review I don't have time for but if you in any way liked Jane Austen's Persuasion and deep intense longing, you'll want to show up for this one. It had the delightful feel from the first in the series but with a deeper heavier tone. The heroine gets a wee bit annoying with...
The heroine was so childish in the beginning of the book - doing things for just a reaction, writing in her journal like a paranoid 13 year old - that when she "grew up" shortly thereafter it was not believable to me. I just could not get why the hero was even attracted to her in the beginning unles...
At the moment I can empathize with Nate and Diana. They may be mourning the one that got away, I however am obsessing over the books I have missed in this series. I was blessed to have received an ARC of How to Rescue a Rake from NetGalley and Sourcebooks in exchange for an honest review. This st...