Next book

LOVE ME FOREVER

After 30 enormously successful paperbacks, Lindsey debuts in hardcover with a typical historical romance: love in 19th-century England between a feisty, intelligent heroine and a devastatingly brawny Highlander. Heiress Kimberly Richards and Scotsman Lachlan MacGregor both have reasons for needing marriage. Kimberly's widowed father, a nasty man who never loved her, wants to remarry, but his intended won't tie the knot until Kimberly is a bride. Green-eyed Lachlan, six feet sevenand with ``legs like tree stumps''is laird of the MacGregor clan, a penniless bunch ever since Lachlan's stepmother ran off after the death of his father, stealing the family's gold and jewels. Though Lachlan is smitten with bonny Megan, an Englishwoman he met once and kidnapped (before her husband took her back and beat Lachlan soundly), he's forced to bite the bullet and travel south to England to the home of the Duke and Duchess of Wrothston, where an aunt has promised to get him a rich wife. Kimberly, too, has come to the Wrothstons to make a match. The duchess, coincidentally that self-same bonny Megan, gives the pair adjoining bedrooms, hoping to help nature along. But Kimberly, a good match for Lachlan because she's tall for a girl and has a talent for investing money profitably, fears that he will never stop loving Megan. In the usual rituals of historical romance, she fights him tooth and nail, but she can't fight the passion he awakens within.... Before the happy Highland endingreplete with baby and the discovery of Kimberly's real ``da''the lovers help each other fight some not particularly clever battles (someone frames Lachlan for horse stealing; Kimberly faces off against her abusive guardian), and there's a haggis-load of Scottish brogue to get through, as well as some sensual set-pieces that don't measure up to the author's best. Predictable Lindsey, though not as much fun as some of its Fabio-covered forebears. (First printing of 300,000; author tour)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 1995

ISBN: 0-688-14286-9

Page Count: 356

Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 1995

Next book

A DUKE TOO FAR

An effervescent Regency romantic mystery brings a decrepit estate to life.

A hunt for treasure—and treasures of the heart.

Peter Rathbone, the Duke of Compton, isn’t ever expecting visitors—his estate is so impoverished that he keeps a tennis racquet at the dinner table to fend off attacks from bats. Suddenly, however, he becomes the host to two parties: the Earl of Macklin, whom he hasn’t seen in six months, and a group of young women (plus chaperone, naturally) who went to school with his late sister, Delia. Led by Miss Ada Grandison, Sarah and Charlotte and Harriet are all eager to help the duke uncover a secret that Delia told Ada about just before her accidental death. Though the house is in disrepair, they all settle in, with chaperone Aunt Julia taking the opportunity to teach them how to run a household. Ada keeps looking for chances to be alone with the duke, to discuss Delia’s secret, and their private encounters spark a mutual interest. But Peter, for his part, won’t act on his feelings, having nothing to offer her, and Ada grows frustrated. After they all discover that Delia’s secret is a potential treasure trove hidden on the estate, the girls race to solve the puzzle Delia left behind and find the fortune. Peter’s not sure anything will come of it—but the chemistry between Ada and him continues, treasure or not. In the fourth volume of her The Way to a Lord’s Heart series (How To Cross a Marquess, 2019), Ashford continues her explorations of a world outside, but not apart from, London society. With a light mystery and evocative detail, she sketches a gentler side of Regency life, away from the haut ton. Although the budding romance between Ada and Peter is sweet and compelling, it’s the friendship between Ada and her three girlfriends that really sets the book apart. All of the dialogue, but especially theirs, is fast-paced and charming, adding a welcome richness to the story. The appearance of Lord Macklin might seem odd to readers who are new to the series, but the book can be read on its own, and fans of the series are sure to enjoy the latest entry.

An effervescent Regency romantic mystery brings a decrepit estate to life.

Pub Date: April 28, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-4926-6344-7

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca

Review Posted Online: Jan. 25, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2020

Next book

LONDON IS THE BEST CITY IN AMERICA

Empty calories, presented cutely enough.

A family wedding forces a runaway fiancée to stick her toe back in the dating pool.

In this weightless debut, Emmy Everett emerges from seclusion—three years in Rhode Island working in a tackle shop—to return to Scarsdale for older brother Josh’s wedding to graceful Meryl. But Josh isn’t sure he wants to get married this weekend: He might be in love with Elizabeth, a holistic veterinarian with whom he has a connection (it was “like they were hearing the same song”). Urged on all sides to be supportive of her sibling during his crisis of indecision, Emmy can’t avoid contemplating the vacuum in her own love life. Mind you, that could easily be remedied, since suitors dog her every step. There’s Josh’s best friend, sexy chef Jaime; old local boyfriend Justin, although he now reveals himself to be gay; and above all ex-fiancé Matt, last seen sleeping in a motel room next to the abandoned engagement ring as Emmy slipped out the door with the knowledge that “she was losing him slowly anyway.” Dave milks the reliable wedding scenario set pieces, supplementing them with various comic characters, including Meryl’s birth parents, a pair of sociology professors never previously seen outside the Ozarks, and Emmy’s Jewish mother (“Eat just a little”). The book offers a kind of innocent yet worldly-wise charm via Emmy’s perky running commentary, but for every burst of invention, like the power outage that throws the doomed wedding off course, there’s a heaping portion of familiarity, especially in Matt’s prostration before Emmy (“I still have the engagement ring”) and her inevitable conjoining with an even more over-romanticized prospect.

Empty calories, presented cutely enough.

Pub Date: May 22, 2006

ISBN: 0-670-03756-7

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2006

Close Quickview