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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A POIGNANT WESTERN ROMANCE WITH A TENDER TRANSFORMATION
In the much-anticipated sequel to THE MOST UNSUITABLE WIFE, Caroline Clemmons returns us to Kincaid County, Texas. In THE MOST UNSUITABLE HUSBAND, Pearl's younger sister, Sarah, gets her own story.
For the first time in her life, Sarah is traveling alone. Returning from her mother's funeral in Arkansas, she defies society's strictures and saves three homeless...
Published on October 21, 2003 by julietburns

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A little disappointed.
After reading the unsuitable wife , I bought Unsuitable husband. The unsuitable wife was clean cut and more interesting. I think we should know if the book has R rated parts in it. I usually stop reading at those point of the book but decided to see how much of the book was like that. I can't believe either that she was that naive . I like to read for pure joy. Not...
Published 2 months ago by gar


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A POIGNANT WESTERN ROMANCE WITH A TENDER TRANSFORMATION, October 21, 2003
By 
"julietburns" (Arlington, TX United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Most Unsuitable Husband (Paperback)
In the much-anticipated sequel to THE MOST UNSUITABLE WIFE, Caroline Clemmons returns us to Kincaid County, Texas. In THE MOST UNSUITABLE HUSBAND, Pearl's younger sister, Sarah, gets her own story.
For the first time in her life, Sarah is traveling alone. Returning from her mother's funeral in Arkansas, she defies society's strictures and saves three homeless orphans. As she struggles to care for the children, Sarah discovers hidden strengths in herself. Throughout the book, she grows from a biddable young lady into an assertive woman.
This transformation alone makes Caroline Clemmons' newest release worth reading. But the book is so much more.
The story begins with Nate Bartholomew buried alive! Nate must claw and kick his way out of a pine box and six feet of dirt! Nate is a rogue. A sexy, golden-eyed gambler bent on taking from Miss-High-and-Mighty Sarah Kincaid what should have been his to begin with. His half of the money from the saloon Sarah's mother and his father ran together. Trouble is, Nate is supposed to be dead.
So he decides to steal back his money by tricking the people of Kincaid Springs. He's done his share of flimflamming in the past, though on a smaller scale. And why not seduce Miss-Butter-Wouldn't-Melt-In-Her-Mouth Kincaid while he's at it?
But Nate soon realizes he can't go through with it when Sarah gazes at him with those violet eyes and sweet innocence. Just because he helped her with those orphans, she thinks he's some hero.
Nate is my favorite kind of tortured hero. Raised by a bitter alcoholic father after his mother dies, Nate has lived an itinerate, shady life and believes he's not good enough for Sarah. Even when he almost dies saving a child's life, he knows Sarah deserves the kind of life he could never provide.
All the endearing characters from the first book return to support Sarah. With the help of Drake, Pearl's husband, and Storm, Sarah's brother, Nate redeems himself in the end.
This poignant Western romance has it all. Action-packed danger, steamy love scenes, a secondary romance, and a tender transformation from a Most Unsuitable Husband to a loving man who is suitable in every way to be a hero in a Caroline Clemmons novel.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Most enjoyable treat, November 8, 2003
This review is from: The Most Unsuitable Husband (Paperback)
While travelling from her mother's funeral back to her home in Texas, Sara Kincaid fints three abandoned children starving and sick. She falls in love with them and rescues them, but turns to help from a 'businessman' she met on the river boat to St. Louis--a man who just happened to be nearby at her mother's funeral.

Nate Bartholomew (Barton) deserved half the money from the sale of the bar but he can't exactly confront Sarah for it. For one thing, he's supposed to be dead. For another, if he wasn't dead, the law would be after him. Still, he vows that he'll get his money back somehow. How he feels about the children Sarah rescues, how he begins to feel about Sarah herself, has nothing to do with his plan. At least not at first. And by the time it starts to matter, by the time he realizes that he wants more of the beautiful young woman, it's too late. Besides, what respectable woman would have anything to do with a con-man and a gambler like himself? Nate knows that he's not husband material.

Author Caroline Clemmons continues her Kincaid series with a sensuous story of love, family, and trust set in 19th century Texas and St. Louis. Fans of the series will be happy to see Storm, Pearl, and the other members of the family again. Nate makes a fine tortured hero. Sarah grows as a character through the story. Always spunky, her love for the children she rescues and her growing affection for Nate allow her to assert herself, to learn to care less about proprieties and more about what is right.

THE MOST UNSUITABLE HUSBAND is an enjoyable treat.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars EXCELLENT FOLLOW-UP - WONDERFUL TO HAVE PREVIOUS CHARACTERS INCLUDED, July 12, 2005
By 
M. Hartmann "abayyan" (Milan, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Most Unsuitable Husband (Paperback)
This is the second story of the Kincaid family.
Pearl and Drake's story started this series. Now we have Sarah's story taking place seven years later.
Pearl and Drake had adopted her half sister, Sarah and half brother, Storm. Thank God, now they have five children of their own. [no namby bamby 1 or 2 additions] Great writer.

Returning from her mother's funeral, Sarah rescues three orphaned children, [grin] she is twenty years old now.

Enter Nate Bartholomew, who has just escapt being buried alive.
He vows to get his half of the sale from the saloon and his mother's ruby ring from Sarah.
When Sarah involved Nate in rescuing the children, it started a change in his life.

His best friend, "Monk" travels to Chicago to inlist the help of the scoundrel, Hargrove to pull a railroad scam.
Boy, does that lead to complications when he wants to call it off.
His plans were to seduce Sarah and take the money raised and head for New Orleans with Monk.

Ah, what love does to the plans of mice and men.
Judge Kincaid and Gabe with Drake and Storm meet the train bringing Sarah and the children home. Ha! they have plans not to let Nate have any free time alone with Sarah.

Of course, she botches up their plans to protect her. [I cannot relate her actions with the fear of scandal in that time frame. Regardless of her upbringing and natural moral values and issues of the time she becomes a "fallen woman" - not exceptable for those women]

I have great hopes that there will be a story for Storm, Gabe and Monk. Aunt Lily took off with her lover and Lex and Belle now have 2 children. The family is growing by leaps and bounds.

Poor Joe survived his terror and made a hero out of Nate.
And the solution to Nate's delimma was great and he becomes a hero again in the eyes of the people he tried to swindel.

Not to critisize but too much attention to the bed scenes detract from the terror and danger [which could have been some stronger].

All in All HIGHLY RECOMMENDED --M - enjoyable read - great characters - great pace. [could have done with out the "fallen woman part" but if you play you pay].
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Western Romance At Its Best!, September 26, 2011
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Caroline Clemmons spins a heckuva good yarn so I started reading her book the moment I bought it, and sure enough, she came through yet again with another heartwarming story.

Sarah Kincaid goes to her mother's funeral. Now, her mother wasn't your ordinary cookie-baking variety--she was a madam and partner with Cal Bartholomew. So Sarah settles up, collects her inheritance and her mother's jewelry, and heads back to Texas.

Nate Barton doesn't have a whole lot to recommend him. He's a gambler and a con man, and likes his life just fine. Except Sarah has his mother's jewelry (Nate's father, Cal, had given the jewelry to Sarah's mother when they married), and half his inheritance, to boot. The fact that everyone thought Nate was dead was of no consequence. He had to somehow or another get that money, and especially the ruby ring from Sarah.

What a wild ride! This story takes twists and turns that would confuse a sidewinder, but all for the sake of love. It has spicy romance, some good ol' western action, and memorable characters. I can hardly wait for the next Caroline Clemmons book!
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A little disappointed., November 10, 2011
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This review is from: The Most Unsuitable Husband (Paperback)
After reading the unsuitable wife , I bought Unsuitable husband. The unsuitable wife was clean cut and more interesting. I think we should know if the book has R rated parts in it. I usually stop reading at those point of the book but decided to see how much of the book was like that. I can't believe either that she was that naive . I like to read for pure joy. Not a prude, but choose to read clean cut romance. To each there own. Just want to know ahead of time.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Problematic, August 11, 2006
By 
Claudia (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Most Unsuitable Husband (Paperback)
In my point of view it's impossible to like the story when you dislike the main characters and that was the problem - I didn't enjoy the main characters.
The heroine is very silly and naïve while the hero is a thief and a tramp (like the title says he IS unsuitable).
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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Poor writing, terrible characters, cliche plot = BAD NOVEL, March 14, 2004
This review is from: The Most Unsuitable Husband (Paperback)
I bought this book based upon the other reviews and am now wondering if we were reading the same book. This book was awful. The heroine was your typically really dumb virgin (BORING) who was so good and kind that she adopted children from the streets. The hero was your typical rake with a tortured past. You probably can figure out where the story goes from here. One final note, the author has this annoying habit of sprinkling the phrase "Um" throughout her dialogue. I advise a more judicious use of the phrase, because it became very annoying! If you are looking for a good western romance, try Jodi Thomas or Alexis Harrington instead.
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The Most Unsuitable Husband
The Most Unsuitable Husband by Caroline Clemmons (Paperback - November 1, 2003)
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