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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dreamy!,
By
This review is from: One Golden Ring (Paperback)
Lady Fiona Hollingsworth needs twenty-five thousand pounds quickly to free her brother, Randy, who has been abducted by Spanish bandits in The Peninsula. However, the family fortune is depleted. When she sees Mr. Nicholas "Nick" Birmingham, the richest stockbroker in England, she gets an idea. The very next day, Fiona goes to Nick's office and offers to marry him in exchange for his help. It is fairly well known that Nick's deceased father had always hoped his son would make an aristocratic match. Even though Nick does not believe himself worthy of Fiona, he agrees. It does not take the pair long to fall totally in love with each other. Lord Edward Warwick, the Foreign Secretary, had grown up unofficially betrothed to Fiona. Yet last year he jilted Fiona to marry another, Countess Maggie. The Crown needs the help of Nick, his brother (William), and his money. Edward goes to Nick, hoping Nick's patriotism will force his agreement. It does, but only because William has experience in stealthy dealings. If not for his loyalty to his country, Nick would have refused. Nick could not help being jealous that Fiona had once loved Edward for so long. Fiona has truly gotten over Edward. She is deeply in love with Nick. She is even growing to adore Nick's illegitimate, eight-year-old daughter, Emmie. But she is jealous that Nick keeps disappearing at night and fears he is going to another woman. In addition to this, it is no secret that Randy frowns upon Fiona marrying so beneath their station. Yet Randy may soon be forced to eat crow. ***** You say that you want dreamy romance? Then pick up a copy of "One Golden Ring". This has got to be the most PERFECT Regency Romance that I have read this year. I actually found myself envying Fiona. You will not find any stupid characters that you will want to strangle. These characters are intelligent and realistic. I have high hopes that a couple of the secondary characters will get their own stories told someday soon. ***** Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful story!,
By Sandra K. Moore (Houston, TX USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: One Golden Ring (Paperback)
I love Cheryl Bolen's marriage of convenience stories.
Marriage of convenience stories are ultimately about the death of expectation. Both parties go into the relationship with one set of expectations -- this is a marriage in name only, both parties will "behave" in society and do whatever they want in private, neither will attempt to put a hold on the other -- and end up surprised. The road to love and passion is usually long and arduous; the hero and heroine are filled with trepidation at their slowly growing feelings; a series of trials brings out the best in both and they finally see each other for who they really are. AN IMPROPER PROPOSAL was an excellently executed marriage of convenience story in this vein, so I began reading ONE GOLDEN RING with my own feeling of trepidation. Would Ms. Bolen be able to pull off another such story? Would it pale in comparison to AN IMPROPER PROPOSAL? I should have known better than to ask. ONE GOLDEN RING attempts a much more difficult scenario and pulls it off with grace. Lady Fiona Hollingsworth, who was jilted by her beloved Edward in THE COUNTERFEIT COUNTESS, faces a new challenge: her brother is being held for ransom by Spanish bandits and her family's fortune has been lost. Only a desperate action can save her brother's life. That action is to propose marriage to Nicholas Birmingham, a stockbroker rumored to be the wealthiest man in England. Nick has long admired Fiona from afar, but his common birth and shady past have prevented him from attempting to move in her circle. To say he's shocked by her offer of marriage in exchange for the twenty-five thousand pounds needed to save her brother would be to oversimplify the emotional complexity of the proposal scene. Fiona doesn't approach Nick Birmingham as a shining star of society deigning to speak to the likes of a lesser being. Instead, she approaches him as a businesswoman. Thus, in the framing of her proposition, she speaks to Nick as an equal, regardless of their stations. Nick, on the other hand, has been raised to be a gentleman and finds himself and his brothers, as Fiona's delightful friend Trevor tells her, "Too good for women of their own class and not good enough for women of our class." Nick is therefore acutely aware of their unequal positions and declines her offer though he hates doing so. Nick is, at heart, an acquirer of money and possessions, but his wish to acquire Fiona, whom he considers to be a model of feminine perfection, grace, and breeding, is held in check only by his strong disinclination to marry a woman who will come to hate him in a loveless marriage. Nick is a man accustomed to denying himself what he most desires, and his desire to have Fiona as his wife is no exception. And no matter how the sparks might fly between them, he believes she's still in love with Edward. After an initial balk, they marry. It takes all of two paragraphs for them to realize just how sexually compatible they will be, and that promise bears out the first night of their marriage. At this point the story could have fallen into a disheveled mess lacking any sort of tension, but Ms. Bolen skillfully plays the erotic against the emotional as she chronicles the relationship. Wonderful secondary characters play out subplots that act as foils and obstacles to the main plot. A very surprising turn of events, which I won't reveal here, creates a tiny rift between Fiona and Nick that, compounded by other rifts, grows wider with each passing page. This novel has a couple of large surprises that further the action, but also a refreshing number of small ones peppered throughout. These small surprises are the kinds of revelations where we say, "Ah! So that's why!" whenever we encounter them. As a result, there's never a dull moment in the story, and never a time when one's attention wanders. ONE GOLDEN RING is a rare treat: a highly sensual novel with a solid emotional foundation. A story about two people who have little in common but passion can be easily mishandled, but Cheryl Bolen has once again put her skill and intuition to the task. ONE GOLDEN RING is a terrific novel, full of emotional complexity, layered storylines, and an eye for the difficulties of people caught in the no-man's land of society's expectations.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
another awesome book from Cheryl,
By reviewer "cj" (Houston, TX) - See all my reviews
This review is from: One Golden Ring (Paperback)
One Golden Ring is yet another wonderful addition to the library of Historical Romances by Cheryl Bolen. Without repeating previous reviews, I'll tell you that I fell in love with these characters, found myself unable to put the book down, and found myself cheering the characters on throughout the entire journey.
Don't miss this one!
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