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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars terrible hero and doormant heroine, November 1, 2009
I couldn't get over the fact that the hero blamed the heroine for losing their baby. The heroine was pushed down the steps by the hero's sister. The hero that supposedly loves the heroine beleived the deranged sister that she didn't push her. Ok so the hero believes his sister that has shown signs of instability and still finds a way to blame the heroine for losing the baby. They never really say if he believes it is her fault because she was clumsy and fell or he thinks she threw herself down the stairs. Through the whole book he makes reference to how she killed the baby and it is all about him wanting to get her pregnant to replace the baby she took from him. All I can say is this is just horrible. He is forgiven to easily in the end and his reason for believing his sister is weak. He never shows her any remorse for the loss she suffered from losing her baby not even really in the end.
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3.0 out of 5 stars From the back cover, January 31, 2007
By 
onlyone (the deep south, usa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Island Of The Dawn (Paperback)
Foolishly she'd never stopped loving him.

Leon had swept the young and innocent Chloe into marriage, but there was no happy ending for them, for there would always be Marisa.

Marisa, obsessive and possessive about her stepbrother, implied a relationship between them that could never be. She claimed a wife was only needed to diguise their sin.

So Chloe, disgusted and confused, ran away.

But a Greek's pride could not accept a wife's desertion, and he tricked her into returning. She hated and despised him - but could not deny she still wanted him...
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