by Madeline Hunter
One of my favorite Hunter books. It seems to grow more complex and lush on each re-read. Wonderful hero and heroine. Very nuanced. Love.
Frustration and more of the same is what I thought and felt throughout most of this book. At the beginning I felt sucked into the story because of the strength of the plot; it's mysterious with who is who's, what happeneds, and oh boy what is going to happen. (fully aware that last sentence is a g...
This book didn't work for me at all. I couldn't relate to either the hero or the heroine - they might as well have been from Mars for all that I could understand of their actions and motivations (most of which on the hero's part were only revealed at the very end of the book - I hate that). Individu...
Daniel St. John takes his ward away from her school when he discovers she's older than he thought. He realizes how attractive she is and decides to use her as a pawn to a game of revenge he's been playing for almost a decade. Nobody knows much about his past and there are many tales about his succes...
Skipped over middle section because it was slow reading, thus I do not know what Tyndale did. Not at all motivated to read the middle section to find out. I think I read too fast for this author's writing pace.
Orphaned Diane Albret finds herself in the headmistress's office to be punished under the eyes of her mysterious guardian, Daniel St. John.Daniel soon realizes his young charge is no longer a child he thought he knew and she no longer belongs into a school. He takes her to his home in Paris, a home ...