Wolf’s Temptation by Donna Birdsell
The heroine’s a better spy than the hero, who just whines a lot.
The heroine’s a better spy than the hero, who just whines a lot.
The pacing of this one dampens an otherwise pleasant read.
The author contrives to place the heroine in a position of weakness here, and that’s unfortunate.
And it was going so well… and then, comes the dumb dumb stuff. Sigh.
What happened to this author? This is heartbreaking.
Oh crap, the hero. He’s crap, and he’s… just crap.
Oh, this one could have been so, so grand but somehow it feels flat instead.
The supposedly capable heroine is upstaged by the newbie hero, needing rescue and all, so all is right in the world.
This is another reminder as to why the shallow insecurities of a bratty heroine make the least interesting conflict.
Why does every traditional Regency author have a crossdressing heroine in her first mainstream historical debut?