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ROGUE WITH A BROGUE

Sparks fly when Arran MacLawry and Mary Campbell meet at a London ball, and the fact that their families are sworn enemies only adds to their interest in each other.

Trying to escape the annoying clutches of his sister’s best friend at a masked ball, Arran bumps into an unknown woman whom he asks to dance. The two definitely feel an attraction, but once the waltz is over, his sister informs him that the woman is none other than Mary Campbell, granddaughter of the leader of an enemy clan. At first convinced she was trying to make a fool of him, Arran confronts her, but she confounds him by turning his attack into a conversation and then finagling him into spending time in her company, which he enjoys more than he ever expected. Their awareness and interest grow, but both Arran and Mary have potential arranged marriages hanging over them, all the better to keep alliances strong and a negotiated peace in place among all the clans. When a misstep leads to the discovery of their relationship, Mary’s family tries to force her into marrying a brute, and Arran rescues her with plans to elope to Scotland. Hunted by Mary’s family and possibly his, they commit to a dangerous path and face betrayal but find shelter and aid in unexpected places. A charming, fun, sexy Highlander version of Romeo and Juliet—or rather an anti-version, since it promises a happily-ever-after.

Scottish clan wars, a Regency sensibility and star-crossed lovers make for a sensual, captivating romance.

Pub Date: July 29, 2014

ISBN: 978-1-250-04161-6

Page Count: 352

Publisher: St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: June 28, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2014

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HOME BEFORE DARK

Well-written women’s weepie from the author of many, now with her first hardcover.

Blindness, babies, bathos.

When photojournalist Jessie Ryder finds that she’s losing her sight to a rare retinal disease, it’s time to take stock—and, at last, meet the child she gave away years before. She rails against her cruel fate as she leaves New Zealand for the Texas town where she grew up. After all, she’d stayed away, kept her distance—and kept her side of the bargain she made with God. She’d provided the best possible home for her newborn by handing her over to her sister Luz and her husband Ian. Even now that she’s a teenager, Lila has no idea that she was adopted (and there’s another thing even Luz doesn’t know). Lila escapes serious injury during a joyriding car accident that shakes the family out of its complacency and forces them to grapple with the Big Questions. Why does Ian, a Death Row lawyer, always have time for his clients but not for his family? Must Luz always shoulder most of the burden of raising the kids and running the house? Luz pines for what she perceives as her sister’s freedom, but Jessie, of course, isn’t really free. She’s always been haunted by what she never told Luz: Lila is the product of a long-ago, whirlwind affair with Ian. Her vision dimming day by day, Jessie wonders whether she’ll ever find happiness. There’s hunky rancher Dusty Matlock, father of an adorable toddler, still fending off media attention ever since his pregnant wife, comatose after a stroke, gave birth by Cesarean and expired a couple of years ago. Should Jessie give in to Blair LaBorde, tabloid reporter, and photograph Dusty? Perhaps. But will Jessie even admit that she’s losing her sight? Yes, once she shares her story yet again at the world-famous center for the blind not far away.

Well-written women’s weepie from the author of many, now with her first hardcover.

Pub Date: April 1, 2003

ISBN: 1-55166-673-1

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Harlequin MIRA

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2003

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ALPHA WOLF NEED NOT APPLY

Limited drama, minor angst, and mediocre writing.

There are too many packs of werewolves in the same Colorado mountains.

The Silver pack, well-manned and well-resourced, runs Silver Town and its surrounding territory. Eric Silver, park ranger and cousin to the pack leader, is on the hunt for a second pack, which may have been growing huge tracts of marijuana on the grounds of the local national park. But instead, he encounters a small, more agreeable pack led by the most beautiful she-wolf he's ever seen. Pepper Grayling is a perfectly capable alpha who's not interested in a mate, but she has to call on Eric and his family when a new danger threatens both of them. While Spear (SEAL Wolf in Too Deep, 2016, etc.) has written 18 prior books in the series, the worldbuilding is thorough enough that a reader can follow the pack structure and nature of the lupus garous without prior knowledge of the universe. There are certainly things a new reader can only guess at, but most of it is irrelevant to the story. A questionable number of alphas in various packs notwithstanding, the story is...readable. It's certainly a page-turner, but the entire story arc is little more than lukewarm. This is unfortunate considering the promise and importance of introducing an alpha female who is also a good pack leader. How many female alphas are there in paranormal romance? But the execution, from meeting to mating, as well as conflict and denouement, is just OK.

Limited drama, minor angst, and mediocre writing.

Pub Date: May 3, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-4926-2186-7

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca

Review Posted Online: March 2, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2016

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