The Sherbrooke Twins by Catherine Coulter
The B-plots are more interesting than anything in the A-plot.
The B-plots are more interesting than anything in the A-plot.
This marriage is better off broken.
This one is familiar, but the author makes the story feel good to read nonetheless.
The dumb and the dumber. Not sure which one is the dumber here, though – both the hero and the heroine are equally moronic.
The so-called feminist heroine shacks up with a man who doesn’t respect her a bit. The joke’s on her.
Now, it’s the plot that is all over the place while the characters are the redeeming features.
This is how you create an exquisite romance out of a revenge plot.
Underdeveloped characters keep this one firmly in the average zone.
This is a generic Avon historical romance. Sorry, is “generic” and “Avon” being in the same sentence a redundant thing?
Are these people really spies? They seem more like rejects from clown school to me.