Book Reviews

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  • Miranda

    Miranda is a tautly-crafted, finely-tuned Regency-era historical filled with spies, suspense, amnesia, and two men vying for the love of the heroine. There are lovely lords, ladies, lairds, and madwomen, Bedlam and the Highlands. The problem with this book is the heroine. Perhaps because she has amnesia for most of the story I had difficulty…

  • Denim and Lace by Patricia Rice

    Denim and Lace is a cut above the hackneyed western romances that seem to be cropping up lately. Although the author offers up the traditional feisty, red-haired heroine and an equally traditional hard-bitten, tortured hero, she injects enough humanity into them that they keep the reader interested. Denim and Lace is the story of Samantha…

  • Mischief by Amanda Quick

    Mischief is the kind of humorous, sexy, light, and romantic novel fans of Amanda Quick have come to cherish. Better than Mystique, her last effort, this book is more on a par with Rendezvous, Scandal, and Mistress. Amanda Quick, the pen name used by Jayne Ann Krentz when writing historicals, does not write “important” romances….

  • Indiscretion by Margaret Allison

    See, there’s a rich guy who runs a company that builds airplane engines. His company hires a beautiful marketing director who’s been badly burned in the past. They would fit nicely together if it weren’t for a bitchy ex-girlfriend, a nasty uncle, and industrial spying/rumor-mongering. Sounds like an interesting plot, doesn’t it? Well – it’s…

  • Captive by Joan Johnston

    Captive is guaranteed to hold you in its thrall. The characters in this Regency-set historical are strongly written, from the leads through the third-tier characters. While written in the traditional mold, these characters and this story are anything but stale and stereotypical. The author’s talent brings everything to vivid life. If you enjoy Guardian/Ward Romances, you…

  • Knights by Linda Lael Miller

    In Knights, Linda Lael Miller has mashed together two stories that would have been better left separate, as perhaps two books or one book and a novella. Instead, everything is crammed into 300 pages and neither story gets the treatment it deserves. The medieval romance is short-changed, as is the time-travel plot-line. As a result,…

  • Passion’s Kiss by Jane Kidder

    Passion’s Kiss is a delightful romp set in the mid-19th century England. The hero is Miles Wellesley, a first-generation American visiting his noble English grandmother while scouting out horses for his family ranch. The heroine is Lady Victoria Pembroke, a beautiful, intelligent, spirited and hoydenish spinster. Their clash, of culture, of wills, and of the…

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