Renaissance Romance

  • Kissed By Shadows

    Kissed By Shadows was a smoothly written book. There was no laugh inducing purple prose and no awkward sentences jerked me out of my reading. Technically, I have nothing to complain about. Gentle Reader: “So why isn’t the grade higher”? O.K., I’ll explain. Lady Phillipa Nielson is a member of the Mary Tudor’s court. As…

  • The Warrior Bride

    This book would have been so much better if the concepts of logic or credibility had been introduced into it. It’s a shame, because this probably could have been a decent read – or at the very least a pleasant diversion – with the addition of those two qualities. Without it, The Warrior Bride is…

  • Captured By Your Kiss

    As Captured By Your Kiss opens, Mona Musgrave, an Englishwoman of common birth, is about to be hanged for the murder of her abusive husband. She is saved when a mystical woman named Arlana, respected by all as the Keeper of the Bloodstone, appears and claims Mona as her apprentice. (The Bloodstone, in case you’re…

  • Heaven and the Heather

    The publisher calls debuting author Elizabeth Holcombe’s Heaven and the Heather a “Highland Fling,” which is true in more ways than one. The word “fling” accurately describes the relationship between the hero and heroine, and also what I wanted to do to the book while I was reading it: fling it somewhere far away. Sabine…

  • Rosamund

    Bertrice Small’s Rosamund is a romance novel only insofar as the author obviously assumes that we will all presumably fall in love with its eponymous heroine. Its storyline, incredible research and the promise (or threat?) that Rosamund’s story will be continued in the next book all speak of a family saga rather than a romance,…

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