This was pretty good but not great. I liked Lee Wilkinson's descriptive writing. I felt like I was within the story, seeing everything in technicolor. I liked how I slowly saw more and more of Jared as a person. Although from the beginning, I could tell he was crazy about Perdita. I find a hero w...
Snowbound in Scotland★★½☆☆ I’m still trying to figure out why I bought this one, as it has a bit of an “ick-factor” to it in that the heroine is pretending to be her brother’s wife. Cathy Richardson, the heroine, gets stuck in a blizzard and has a one night fling with one irresistible Ross Dalgowan...
When her younger brother asks fo her help in order to get the job of his dreams, Cathy accepts, even though it means she must portray his wife. Little did she know, but she would meet the man of her dreams and he is their new boss. Ross believes Cathy to be a lying deceitdul woman, but he has a har...
Perhaps I’m just in the mood right now to enjoy any Harlequin that isn’t about an tycoon blackmailing his ex into sleeping with him, but I thought this had a decent premise. Sophia, though not the brightest crayon in the box, is a refreshingly straightforward person who is falling for a man and tryi...
Have no idea why I finished this. The story was dull--the only potentially interesting conflict is disposed of half a page after it comes up--and the writing has all the elegance and subtlety of a pie in the face,