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7 Reviews
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
If you like your tea HOT!,
By
This review is from: Tea for Two (Mass Market Paperback)
You can't miss with either of these exceptional authors!IN A MOONLIT GARDEN - Cathy Maxwell HUNTING SEASON - Liz Carlyle
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Two strong novellas,
This review is from: Tea for Two (Mass Market Paperback)
"In a Moonlit Garden" by Cathy Maxwell. To prove his worth to his beloved, Colonel Michael Sanson pretends to be a tea merchant to get inside the home of a scientist considered to have stolen a formula. However, Michael soon finds himself enlisted to a different masquerade after meeting the niece of his target. He begins to wonder how fickle can one get as he finds himself falling in love with Lady Jocelyn, but her intended is whom he is supposed to make jealous, not push aside. This is an engaging historical romance that stars wonderful characters."Hunting Season" by Liz Carlyle. Marquis Christian Villiers is obsessed with ruining Roth who caused his sister Lenora to commit suicide. He finds the perfect plan when he meets the intended bride of the dastardly villain. However, Christian's plans radically change when he begins to fall in love with the kind Lady Elise Middleton. This also is a charming historical romance that contains beguiling protagonists. Both stories are strong novellas that readers will enjoy. Cathy Maxwell and Liz Carlyle provide strong tales with wonderful casts that testify to the talents of the writers to entertain sub-genre troops. Harriet Klausner
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Two authors, two stories, two different verdicts,
By
This review is from: Tea for Two (Mass Market Paperback)
In Cathy Maxwell's IN A MOONLIT GARDEN, Colonel Michael Sanson has distinguished himself on the field of battle for the past five years, all to prove himself worthy of the beautiful Ivy Lewin. However, before Sir William Lewin will give approval to the match, he wants Michael to "retrieve" a scientific formula he claims his rival, Geoffrey Kenyon, has stolen. Disguised as a traveling tea merchant, Michael sets off on his unorthodox quest. Almost immediately he meets Kenyon's niece, Jocelyn, who enlists him in yet another masquerade. Even as Michael works towards attaining his goal of Ivy's hand, he finds himself falling under Jocelyn's spell. Soon Michael is knee deep in lies, plots and tea leaves.
Liz Carlyle's HUNTING SEASON introduces us to the charismatic Christian Villiers, the Marquis of Grayston. Newly returned from exile in the Continent, Christian has come to England to destroy Denys Roth, the man responsible for his sister's suicide. To that end, Christian is attending a house party where he plans to seduce the woman Roth plans on marrying. However, instead of the worldly widow he had expected, Christian discovers Elise Middleton to be beautiful, virtuous and the stepmother of a little girl. Every stolen moment with her becomes heaven and hell for the haunted marquis. Somehow Elise becomes his hope of salvation even as he uses her to force a confrontation that will ruin any chance of happiness. When his machinations finally bring about a confrontation, Christian must look deep inside and make a final decision. Two authors, two stories, two totally different heroes. While all the elements for a great story were in place for Cathy Maxwell's novella, the main characters never fully grabbed this reader's attention. Both hero and heroine have been in love with other people for years yet their instant attraction to each other is supposed to excuse the rather fast shift in their affections. While most of the other characters appear one-dimensional and clichéd, the quaint English village does provide a cozy setting for all the plots being hatched. Perhaps if this had been a longer length story rather than a novella, Ms. Maxwell would have had a better chance at creating more sympathetic characters in this tepid tale. In direct contrast, Liz Carlyle's story of a marquis torn between finding salvation and delivering retribution is a poignant treat. Readers will empathize with this heroine torn between temptation and virtue and this hero struggling with demons from his past. Other guests at the house party provide interesting secondary stories. Ms. Carlyle's tale moves at a brisk pace, powered by an unforgettable pair of lead characters and a love affair that will leave you reaching for a tissue or two. TheSchemer
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Average: 1 star for Maxwell; 4 & 1/2 for Carlyle,
By
This review is from: Tea for Two (Mass Market Paperback)
These two novellas couldn't be any different.Cathy Maxwell's story is rather dull and, worse, silly. I've read better fan fiction -- much better, and lots of of it. This is so far below Cathy Maxwell's best; it's not even mediocre--it's amateurish. At the risk of sounding like Simon Cowell, it was abysmal. The hero's disguise is no disguise at all; the heroine acts like a teenager; and the ending is ridiculous beyond belief. Liz Carlyle's offering, on the other hand, is a delight in every way. She starts with one of the most beautifully written descriptions I have had the pleasure of reading in a very long time. Her hero evokes images of the best in Georgette Heyer's "These Old Shades" while incorporating some of the best of modern romantic heroes. I like him very, very much! Elise, is understandably drawn to him at once--until she learns his name; then his reputation causes her to keep her distance, or try to. My only reason for cutting 1/2 a star is that I think Elise could be a stronger, more individual character. She's good; she just doesn't quite jump off the page and into your heart the way the hero does. Christian (Grayston) really dominates this beautifully written tale. This book is worth buying for Carlyle's novella alone. It is nearly everything that makes a romance a thing a beauty.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Two for the price of one,
By
This review is from: Tea for Two (Mass Market Paperback)
There's always a risk when you buy a collection that you love one story and hate the other and feel you've been ripped off. This is not the case with this book. I felt it was good value because both the stories are very enjoyable. Yes...the Maxwell story is not as good as the Carlyle story...3 stars compared to 4.5. But it was a light, feel-good story that was easy to read. The Carlyle story was much darker and intense, and could have been a full book. I agree with other readers who felt the one weakness was Elsie who needed to be a strong character to match the intenseness of Grayston. An enjoyable book that I would recommend.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Two good stories,
By Shimmertje (Muscat, Oman) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Tea for Two (Mass Market Paperback)
I bought this book because I like Liz Carlyle, and was surprised that I also enjoyed Cathy Maxwell's story as I don't particularly enjoy her work.
Maxwell's story was somewhat convoluted - perhaps a bit too messy - but things did work out in the end and the characters came across as very human. Carlyle's story shines - even if you don't like Maxwell it's worth it for the Carlyle half.
3 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
BORING!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Tea for Two (Mass Market Paperback)
To say the least, the first story by Cathy Maxwell wasn't bad but also not her best. My first view of Liz Carlyle makes me just mad at the publishing house for printing something and putting a price tag on it when it should have gone straight to the garbage. Her sentence structure was and "A" but I didn't buy a book to see how well the writing was but how good the story was. I don't usually put much into posting here but this story stunk so bad I had to. The supposed hero says "Oh God" so often which I find offensive but after a while thought perhaps Mz Carlyle was torn between fiction something and inspirational. So many good story tellers get rejected and this we spend good money on. In a word this book was Boring!
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Tea for Two by Liz Carlyle (Mass Market Paperback - April 30, 2002)
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