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When two friends are found in a compromising situation, their marriage of convenience turns into something neither was looking for ... and something neither can live without.
Nicholas Parrish wakes one morning to pounding at the front door of his London townhouse. Standing before him is the irate father of Prudence Armitage and several of her scowling brothers. They accuse him of compromising Prudence, and to his astonishment the woman in question walks out of his study, looking as if she's just been roused from her bed! Prudence had a tiring night putting the finishing touches to The Ladies' Fashionable Cabinet, the magazine she and Nicholas, along with his sister Edwina, have been working on.
With Edwina on an extended wedding trip, Prudence had wanted everything to be perfect. But she fell asleep at her desk, and when she walks out of the office and sees her family ready to murder the man she had secretly had a crush on, Prudence is appalled. And when a marriage is forced between them, she is devastated. The damage is done, though, and now she's determined to make things right between herself and her new husband . . . by making him fall in love with her.
Nicholas Parrish had always thought of quiet, shy Prudence Armitage, assistant editor of his sister's popular ladies' magazine, as a friend-when he thought of her at all, that is. But when Pru falls asleep one night while working late in her office, which just happens to be in Nick's house, and her aristocratic family declares her thoroughly compromised and demands that they wed, he resigns himself to a lackluster marriage-and, much to his surprise, ends up with the wife of his dreams. It is not easy to make an unassuming, somewhat insecure heroine appealing or to make her blossom realistically, and it is no easier to take an initially angry, resentful, though honorable hero and make him truly "heroic," but Hern has done a masterly job of both. Good writing, the effective use of dual viewpoints (hero and heroine), and marvelously colorful secondary characters, both old and new, make this final volume in Hern's "Ladies' Fashionable Cabinet" trilogy charming and especially memorable. Although this book stands on its own, readers will also want to read the earlier books in the series (Once a Dreamer, Once a Scoundrel), the second of which was one of the Romance Writer of America's (RWA) Ten Favorite Books of 2003. Hern writes exceptionally well-done Regencies and Regency-set historicals and is gaining a growing fan base. She lives in San Francisco. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsCandice Hern has always enjoyed escaping into the history and literature of Regency England. After years of re-reading the novels of Jane Austen and other women of the period, she by chance discovered the great Georgette Heyer— and all her contemporary stepchildren—and was instantly hooked.
Candice lives in San Francisco in a house cluttered with African violets, orchids, Regency-period antiques, and mountains of reference books.
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May 25, 2005: I've enjoyed all of Candice's books and this one is my favorite of her 'Once' series. Pru and Nicholas are both delightful. I recommend this book.
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April 01, 2004: In 1802 when her boss Edwinna goes to the continent on her honeymoon, Prudence Armitage temporarily takes over running The Ladies? Fashionable Cabinet magazine. Prudence is very diligent putting in long hours on the magazine that is headquartered in the home of Nicholas Parrish, brother to the editor. When Prudence falls asleep at her desk and spends the night un-chaperoned at Nicholas? house, her father and four Viking-like brothers arrive demanding marriage or satisfaction. Nicholas agrees when he learns that Prudence is the granddaughter of a duke...................... Prudence has loved Nicholas since she first met him several years ago, but he does not see her as a woman. Instead he sees her as a friend and fellow republican. Neither wants this marriage, but soon love on his part enters the equation. However, instead of showing how much she means to him, Nicholas allows pride in his social reform beliefs to cause a schism between them............................. Though the actions of her father and brothers seem at odds with how they ignore the extended family mistreatment of Prudence, fans will enjoy this compromise based marriage. The lead couple is a unique pairing as they are republicans though Nicholas? arrogance and his ?reactions? to having to marry because of her rank seem so much like the aristocracy. Still he and Prudence are a delightful pairing and her extended kin add depth to a fine tale of love........................... Harriet Klausner