

".I have also decided that I will have your breasts kept well covered no matter the cost. The hero once he fell for the heroine became possessive and jealous without realizing it. She even hit the hero and threw him off his horse if I remember correctly despite being overly in love with him. I liked the romance and the progression of it.

I'm looking forward to reading her more recent works and seeing how she improved. Although the transitioning between them were a bit hard to follow. Catherine Coulter does have a gift for fun and lively dialogue. Two, I wanted more of the hero and heroine. One, I thought they might get their own novel. There are intimate scenes and POV's from them that I just didn't and wasn't interest in reading about. The heroine's sister marries the hero's cousin. The hero and his brother discuss their bastards in the beginning of the novel!!!!! The hero has one child out of wedlock, but it is never mentioned again in the novel!!!!! Um, hello!!! Not very romance-book-hero-like to me. It didn't add much drama to the story but it was a big thing in the beginning and end. There are few plot elements I thought didn't go well and took away from the romance. Perhaps it is because this is an older book. There were all of things, writing wise that I would change. Tell me what you think.I read this a few weeks ago and completely forgot what I was going to write about it. This is the fourth and final book in the Bride series, and I like it the best of all. Then the Local Bastard, Mary Rose Fordyce, a remarkable young woman blessed with a soft, steady heart and a courageous spirit, comes unexpectedly into his life, in desperate need of his protection. Tysen refuses, but Meggie is blessed with a full measure of Sherbrooke resolve, and a wily plan of action.ĭevout, thoughtful, honorable to his soul, Tysen’s narrow, sober would world explodes when he steps into a bee-hive of complications-facing down dreadful people who would as willingly slit his English throat as look at him. His ten-year-old daughter, Meggie, insists she should accompany him. Tysen feels it is his duty to visit his new holdings. Two months after Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo, Tysen Sherbrooke, the youngest of the three brothers, now thirty-one years old, a vicar, a widower, and the father of three children, has just been told by the earl that he’s become the new Baron Barthwick of Kildrummy Castle in Scotland. All the Sherbrooke clan are alive, well and in rip-roaring spirits in August of 1815.
