Return of Scandal’s Son by Janice Preston
This story is like a badly done cyborg. It looks almost normal… until one looks a little harder and, eeuw, can we just quickly move on now.
This story is like a badly done cyborg. It looks almost normal… until one looks a little harder and, eeuw, can we just quickly move on now.
This is a very readable, well-written book. But the cover is still the most memorable thing about it.
The heroine’s worth a strangle or two, but this story is sweet, pleasant… and bewilderingly ordinary.
Just like the hero with the heroine, this book may just rape you into a blissful stupor.
If you are hankering for a story where nobody talks and everyone thinks awful things of one another, this is your lucky day.
This one is quite campy, so much so that it’s actually quite fun.
Talk about a high-maintenance heroine: the one in this story is not only a liability and a worthless baggage, she is determined to the very end to play the victim.
This is a pretty ordinary Western romance, but oh dear, the heroine is creepy-scary. I still am not sure whether this is a good or bad thing.
A horny girl comes between two men, and the hero kills his brother for her. You know, I wish I’d read that book instead of this one.
This is the romance novel equivalent of a Taylor Swift song.