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Sean O'Neill was once everything to Eleanor de Warenne--but since he disappeared from his ancestral home, there has been no word, and even Eleanor has abandoned hope, promising her hand to another. Then, just days before her wedding, Sean reappears...but the boy who was once her protector is now a stranger, hardened by prison and on the run.
Weary and haunted, Sean is shocked to find that little Elle has become the beautiful, desirable Eleanor. Though he refuses to endanger her by pressing his claim, his resolve to stay away is sorely tested by the determination of a woman who will not be forsaken again. And when, in a moment's passion, Sean steals another man's bride, it is Eleanor who has the power to steal his heart...
This third volume of Joyce's popular de Warenne dynasty (following The Masquerade) features impetuous and independent de Warenne daughter Eleanor, betrothed to a kind, decent and well-connected Englishman, Peter Sinclair. As might be expected, her heart belongs to another: her half-brother and best friend Sean O'Neill, who disappeared from their Irish estate four years earlier. Now, with her wedding just days away, Eleanor learns that Sean has been rotting in prison for two years, convicted on charges of treason-and that he's just escaped. Sean's plan is to sail for freedom in America, but he's compelled to return home first, ostensibly to offer his farewells to Eleanor. Things don't turn out quite so simple: though already in her wedding gown, Eleanor forgets her fianc and flees with Sean in front of 200 wedding guests. Pursued by the authorities, the family and the in-laws, the fugitive couple navigates a tense, twisting plot as well as the treacherous emotional territory between them. Sean, damaged from his years in isolation, is a strong and mysterious lead, and Eleanor is more than his match; Joyce's characters carry considerable emotional weight, which keeps this hefty entry absorbing, and her fast-paced story keeps the pages turning. (Oct.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsBrenda Joyce is the bestselling author of thirty-four novels and four novellas. She wrote her first novella when she was sixteen years old and her first novel when she was twenty-five--and was published shortly thereafter.
She has won many awards, and her very first novel, Innocent Fire, won a Best Western Romance award. She has also won the highly coveted Best Historical Romance award for Splendor and a Lifetime Achievement Award from Romantic Times BOOKreviews magazine.
She is the author of the critically acclaimed Deadly series, which is set in turn-of-the-century New York and features amateur sleuth Francesca Cahill. There are over twelve million copies of her novels in print and she is published in over a dozen foreign countries.
A native New Yorker, she now lives in southern Arizona with her husband, son, dogs, cat and numerous Arabian and half-Arabian reining horses. Brenda divides her time between her twin passions--writing powerful love stories and showing her beloved horses. For more information about Brenda and her upcoming novels, please visit her Web site at www.brendajoyce.com.
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January 17, 2008: I have to say that this was not Brenda's best work. It takes away from the quality of the other De Warenne Dynasty Series. Not sure where Brenda Joyce went wrong here, but the book was just awful!
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December 17, 2007: I had read A Lady at Last and enjoyed every page of it, so I picked up this book and her the next in the de Warrene series immediately. I decided to read this one first since it was the earlier book in the series. Sadly, I'm debating whether to even waste my time with The Perfect Bride after reading this one. I hope it is of better caliber than this debacle. First, the whole semi-incestuous stepbrother/stepsister thing was just a little too wierd for my taste. Instead of making the reader see their long suffering love, the flashbacks of their childhood had the opposite effect and magnified the creepiness of the familial connection. But like a trooper, I kept reading thinking that I would get past that fact once I really grew acquainted with the main characters. Unfortunately, these were the most irritating characters I have ever encountered in a book, including the villians. The heroine, Eleanor, was like a broken record. The hero, Sean, was equally irritating. They did the stupidest things, especially Eleanor. Their dialogue was flat and repetitive. I could not bring myself to empathize with thier plight at all. By the end, I was hoping they would get caught and hung just to put us all out of our misery!