Loving A Lost Lord
Battered by the sea, Adam remembers nothing of his past, his ducal rank, nor the shipwreck that almost claimed his life. However, he's delighted to hear that the golden-haired vision tending his wounds in his wife. Mariah's name and face may be familiar, but her touch, her warmth, feel...
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Battered by the sea, Adam remembers nothing of his past, his ducal rank, nor the shipwreck that almost claimed his life. However, he's delighted to hear that the golden-haired vision tending his wounds in his wife. Mariah's name and face may be familiar, but her touch, her warmth, feel deliciously right. When Mariah Clarke prayed for a way to deter a bullying suitor, she didn't imagine she'd find the answer washed ashore on a desolate beach. Convincing Adam that he is her husband is surprisingly easy. Resisting the temptation to act his wife, in every way, will prove anything but. And now a passion begun in fantasy has become dangerously real - and completely irresistible.
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Format: mass market paperback
ISBN:
9781420103281 (1420103288)
Publish date: July 1st 2009
Publisher: Zebra
Pages no: 340
Edition language: English
Category:
Love,
Literature,
European Literature,
British Literature,
Historical Fiction,
Romance,
Adult,
Historical Romance,
19th Century,
Womens Fiction,
Chick Lit,
Regency,
Regency Romance
Series: The Lost Lords (#1)
One of my favorite romances ever. A definite keeper, some romance, some far-fetched coincidences, and good characters.
3.5. This was a lot of fun, but highly unbelievable. At least the author just went for it rather than trying to cover for the crazy by making everything else normal. It made it fun instead of ridiculous.
2.5/3 stars Okay so I pretty much went into this with high hopes and anticipation. Unfortunately it was a painful infuriating read to get through for the first half of the story. I was sorely tempted a few times to just up and quit this book. It was that bad for me. The storyline had a lot of delici...
Generic amnesia plot, with just enough danger to keep it from getting too boring. Not anywhere near Putney's best, but not her worst either.