The Sins of Lord Lockwood by Meredith Duran
The greatest sin of all is the inability of the author to make me care for the hero’s billowing, great big angst of all angst.
The greatest sin of all is the inability of the author to make me care for the hero’s billowing, great big angst of all angst.
There is a good story here, but the theatrics from the hero and the heroine are distracting.
Four authors show how played-out historical romance tropes can be.
Death to the lady, more like. DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE DIE.
Good is overrated. I’d have preferred the lady to be smarter.
A wounded hero and the heroine who scolds and cheers him back to being his happy old self. The whole effort feels more contrived than anything else.
The heroine’s fun, but the hero is a big whiny crybaby.
The author’s unwillingness to let things get more complicated – and real – ends up sabotaging this story.
The whole thing feels too staged from start to finish.
At last, a book by this author that hits the right spots!