Ridiculous
Identity theft regency style. Funny. Sexy. Cross Dressing. Not your mother's Regency Romance.After the death of her miserly cousin Antony North, Millicent Boarder is determined her family should never be poor or vulnerable again. To protect them she conceals her cousin's death and assumes his...
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Identity theft regency style. Funny. Sexy. Cross Dressing. Not your mother's Regency Romance.After the death of her miserly cousin Antony North, Millicent Boarder is determined her family should never be poor or vulnerable again. To protect them she conceals her cousin's death and assumes his identity. Now she must face the Ton and the world as Mr. North and accept the price she must pay for her family's safety -- she will never be loved.Which means, of course, at this point she will meet the perfect man.
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Format: kindle
ISBN:
9780985066321
ASIN: B0084VC2LC
Publish date: May 19th 2012
Publisher: Corvallis Press
Pages no: 325
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Humor,
Comedy,
Historical Fiction,
Romance,
Adult,
Historical Romance,
Womens Fiction,
Chick Lit,
Regency,
Regency Romance
The biggest strength of this book: the dialogues. It was witty and entertaining and I very much liked the characters. It made for an interesting and enjoyable read even if the villains were more evil than necessary and the romance plot was more than improbable. But the falling in love was done...
I really enjoyed this Kindle Freebie I downloaded. It's a little over the top and contrived but so much fun that these little flaws are easily forgiven. This is a comical, plot driven story in the spirit of earlier Regency Romance novels. There are descriptions of sex in this book but they aren't...
I really enjoyed this Kindle Freebie I downloaded. It's a little over the top and contrived but so much fun that these little flaws are easily forgiven. This is a comical, plot driven story in the spirit of earlier Regency Romance novels. There are descriptions of sex in this book but they aren't...
Nice, marginally interesting, but then there was the ever-present "You cannot, you cannot."