
Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.
Enter a zip code
(Mass Market Paperback)
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| Available in eBook | $5.59 |
Once upon a time...in a kingdom high in the Pyrenees, three young princesses were forced to flee the chaos in their land vanishing without a trace and lost to their people...until the day a courageous prince can bring each princess home.
Life in exile has taught the passionate Princess Amy to hate injustice, and on the enchanting English isle of Summerwind, she finds injustice personified in the powerful and wickedly handsome Jermyn Edmondson, marquess of Northcliff. Since he has stolen the islanders' livelihood, Amy decides to steal him. She kidnaps the arrogant nobleman, chains him with his own manacles, and holds him for ransom.
It's a simple plan, destined to succeed. Surely Jermyn's uncle will pay his ransom. Alas, his uncle would be delighted if someone killed his nephew and left him to inherit the title and fortune. And holding the furious, guileful, sensual Jermyn chained in her basement provides a challenge to Amy's restraint...and her virtue.
How could such a little revenge and blackmail go so passionately wrong?
The witty second entry in bestseller Dodd's Lost Princesses historical series (after Some Enchanted Evening) chronicles the story of Princess Amy Rosabel, one of the three displaced princesses of Beaumontagne, a small European kingdom. In 1810, Amy is living on Summerwind, an island off the coast of Devon, whose residents have fallen on hard times thanks to the neglect of the Marquess of Northcliff, Jermyn Edmonson. A fierce, impulsive do-gooder, Amy carries out a plan to kidnap the handsome marquess and use his ransom to help the people of Summerwind. When Jermyn's Uncle Harrison refuses to pay the ransom, foiling Amy's scheme, she's left to deal with the irate hostage now residing in her cellar. As the animosity between Amy and Jermyn changes to romantic tension, and they edge ever closer to a sensual love affair, their romance is complemented by subplots involving Jermyn's long-lost mother and Harrison's true intentions toward his nephew. Dodd's intelligent historical romances never fail to please; this latest is no exception. (Feb.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsChristina Dodd's novels have been translated into ten languages, won Romance Writers of America's prestigious Golden Heart and RITA® Awards, and have been called the year's best by Library Journal. Dodd is a regular on the USA Today, Publishers Weekly, and New York Times bestseller lists. Christina loves to hear from fans.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
September 09, 2007: I did not enjoy this book at all. This book had a story line that had the promise of romance and intrigue, but fell short, very short, of its potential. The characters were flat and very irritating. I simply wanted to make them shut up. They seemed rather dull and stupid. I didn't care what they did and what their fates were by the end of the story. I justed wanted to be over with them. The story line was flat and undeveloped. It had some different elements and side stories, but everything was too shallow to be truly interesting. In addition, it was rather predictable and formulaic. If you're looking for a true good read, turn elsewhere.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
May 04, 2007: i love this one. it had everything a good story should have. love, fights, and really good looking guys.