Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
read another of Michaels' books instead, February 7, 2002
Barbara Michaels usually writes wonderful Gothic romances with great plot twists, wonderful characters and witty dialogue. You won't find any of that here. I had to force myself to finish this dreadful book. The "heroine" is actually the plain-looking and plain-spoken sister Jane. The governess who you think will be the heroine is a pretty idiot who can't see the obvious flaws in the man she works so hard to entrap. Except for Jane and a few workmen, every character in this book is so boorish, selfish or sociopathic that you don't care what happens to them. Forget this book. Read instead Michaels' clever "Stitches in Time" or her even better "Wait for What Will Come." They're both so excellent you'll mourn when you come to the last page.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
beautiful descriptions, but painfully boring, June 9, 2006
The build up of suspense that occurred throughout this book was appealing, but the results were always a let down. Many secondary characters are described in great detail when they first appear, then they don't appear again in the book for several chapters (including a young ward which was the entire reason for the "main character" to arrive in the first place). Some interesting storylines were introduced but seemed to go nowhere. I was disappointed and skipped over most of the beautiful yet very lengthy descriptions that seemed to weigh the story down.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Old-fashioned romantic suspense with a twist, June 25, 1998
By A Customer
I grew up on Victorian novels and Ms. Michaels captures what I remember of their style. The heroine, Megan, is such a twit that she can't figure out that her beloved Edmund is a grade-A jerk. The character who makes the book is Edmund's sister, Jane, a woman of intelligence, courage, and sense. Sam, their kinsman, is a good character, too. I spent much of the book wanting to shake some sense into Megan, but I kept on reading because I cared about Jane, Sam, and the townspeople. The author's solution was what I figured would be the only way to bring a happy ending out of this mess, but I did not expect the method she used to pull it off.
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