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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
I fell in love with these characters,
By "joyinbooks" (Lansing, MI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Hostage Bride (Mass Market Paperback)
This is your standard historical romance book, but I really felt a connection to the characters in this one. Even when the three girls meet at the beginning, I attached to each of them in their own special way. Portia is a very loving, intelligent and strong woman who fights for what she believes in. I found myself really liking this woman and cheering her on. I also really wanted her and Rufus to get together...I laughed and cried right along with the ups and downs of their relationship. The pinnacle scene in this book where they finally get together can put me in tears every time I read it. If you read these books for the historical/battle scenes, you may be a bit disappointed. The battle scenes are somewhat realistic, but are pretty glossed over in that everyone makes up and becomes friends in the end after years of hatred. That was a bit amusing, but is really a small part of the overall story. I also purchased the other two books in the series and look forward to reading them.
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
First of an English Civil War series - good one-time read,
By
This review is from: The Hostage Bride (Mass Market Paperback)
At the beginning of this book we meet the three young girls who are the heroines of this series: Portia, Phoebe and Olivia. This introductory scene appears in all three books, just in case anyone's missed it.Portia is the bastard daughter of the Marquis of Granville's bastard brother. When her father dies, Granville offers her a home within his household, but he isn't that interested in her, and his wife, Diana, makes it clear that she is to be an extra servant, helping take care of the infant children. Olivia, Granville's daughter from an earlier marriage, befriends Portia, however. An old enemy of the Granville household, Rufus Decatur, former Earl of Rothbury, has sworn revenge on the family of the man who was responsible for his father's death and disgrace. Olivia is to be kidnapped and used as a bargaining tool. However, a mistake is made and Portia is kidnapped instead. Rufus isn't sure what to do with her, so he keeps her prisoner. However, Portia then decides that she wants to train and to join his militia as a soldier - even though she knows that Rufus intends to attack her uncle's household! That part was difficult to swallow; war is a serious business, and even if Portia isn't particularly loyal to either King or Parliament, the thought of striking against her uncle's home, and especially her cousin, should surely not have come so easily to her. Like another reviewer, I wasn't convinced by the 'falling in love' part of the book, and the resolution in particular was unconvincing. Finally, Rufus at one point used the term 'bourgeoisie'. Isn't early seventeenth-century England a little early for that term to be in common currency, since it's normally associated with the French revolution?
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I'm hooked!,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Hostage Bride (Mass Market Paperback)
This book is a great read, with well-developed and lovable characters and a pretty good plot. I love the heroine's spunk, independence, and determination, and I will most definitely buy the next two books of the trilogy when they come out. I also like the settings--a drafty castle, a frozen moat, a freezing countryside, a secluded criminal camp, a cozy cottage. I also liked that the heroine is not absolutely perfect in looks; she is realistic, like the rest of us, and her beauty comes from her heart and personality. The sexual tension is believable every step of the way, and the plot never slows down. My favorite scene is the practical jokes that Portia and Olivia play at one point.
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