by Eileen Jackson
I couldn't finish this one because of the one-dimensional characterization of everyone in the story besides the heroine and the hero. Why do the mother and sister of the heroine, not to mention other characters that have a role in the story, have to be portrayed so unrelentingly negatively? Howe...
I was pleasently suprised. It is know early on where the heroine stands and it's only know early on why the hero is the way he is. The book is told from the heroine's view, an intelligent young woman, who can reconcile whatshe knows of the hero and what she feels for him.