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16 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars EXCELLENT - DEFINITELY A KEEPER
Been a while since I have enjoyed the Regency Romance.

The Unruly Chaperon helped to get rid of the sour taste left by the contemporary females and their twaddle of equal PMS freedom.

Lady Mathilda Cavendish and her daughter, Anthea travel with her cousin, Amelia Pemberton to the Estate of the Duke of St. Ormond. She is thinking of spiking his...
Published on July 1, 2005 by M. Hartmann

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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Quite a disappointment
I have read two previous books by this author and can only say I think this novel was a huge step back for her. There is nothing particularly original about the plot or the characters, and the Big Misunderstanding that keeps the Hero & Heroine apart for most of the story is especially dumb.

The hero thinks the heroine has decided to be a loose woman and that...
Published on March 28, 2005 by SusieQ


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16 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars EXCELLENT - DEFINITELY A KEEPER, July 1, 2005
By 
M. Hartmann "abayyan" (Milan, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Been a while since I have enjoyed the Regency Romance.

The Unruly Chaperon helped to get rid of the sour taste left by the contemporary females and their twaddle of equal PMS freedom.

Lady Mathilda Cavendish and her daughter, Anthea travel with her cousin, Amelia Pemberton to the Estate of the Duke of St. Ormond. She is thinking of spiking his proposal of marriage to Amelia, knowing he is a little too worldly for her innocent cousin.

She remembers, not with too much joy, Crispin Malvern from about seven years ago at her own come-out into Society and his slighting remarks. And yet, that wonderful waltz.

Cris is getting up there in age, at 36, a bit long in the tooth for an innocent 17 year old female. Tilda's own marriage was to Jonathan, a man in his fifties. While her marriage had turned out reasonably well, she was convinced that Milly would not deal well with Cris's idea of marriage.

Ah, it gets more interesting when Cris's mother, the Dowager introduces Lady Winter and Milly to her brother-in-law, Lord John Malvern and his son, Guy [27 years old]. Guy instantly starts to flirt lightly with Lady Winter but is attracted to Milly, an attraction that grows.

Then cross-purposes grow between the main characters with the background of each influenceing their perception of each other's attitude to marriage. Cris realizes, a bit late, that Lady Winter's attitude of aloofness hides a vulnerability not visable to others. Tilda's attempt to shock the Duke just strengthens his idea of her widow's position in Society, allowing for a discreet liason

What a lovely, complex bit of romance for the Regency period with a bit of spicey dialog and the same old female surrender but helped along with a wonderful cast of characters to bounce off of.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED - m -- well paced story, mixed-up powerful emotions, and lovable characters - surely a keeper!
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Quite a disappointment, March 28, 2005
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I have read two previous books by this author and can only say I think this novel was a huge step back for her. There is nothing particularly original about the plot or the characters, and the Big Misunderstanding that keeps the Hero & Heroine apart for most of the story is especially dumb.

The hero thinks the heroine has decided to be a loose woman and that she's sleeping with his cousin; the heroine thinks the hero has deeper feelings than she imagined for his fiancee-of-convenience, who happens to be HER cousin. And, although BOTH beliefs are proven false DURING the story (well before the end), neither character let themselves realize/acknowledge that what they believed about the other isn't true.

Then, 1/3 toward the end, the story evolves into the VERY overused, "I-won't-love-him/her-until-he/she-says-I-love-you" formula.

I had enjoyed the author's last book, "The Unexpected Bride", so I really had high hopes for this work. It was doubly disappointing to read this because her last book added quite a bit of freshness to the typicial Regency romance formula. This one definitely does not.

However, I award two stars for the sensual scenes, which are very sensual if you care about that type of thing, and for the fact that the book does move along, and is not exactly boring; it's just unoriginal, and aside from the sensual scenes, somewhat bland, silly really. Very disappointing step backwards, in my opinion, from this author.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Who's loving who, July 1, 2010
This was very good Regency until the author ruined it by letting the misunderstanding between the H/h drag on and on and on. I skimmed read the last few chapters of misunderstanding just to finish the book. I could understand why Tilda thought she was not worthy enough for Crispin due to her background and life while living with her uncle. Even though she was forced into a May/December marriage and was left a wealthy widow it is hard to overcome the abuse in ones youth. So Tilda's lack of confidence was understandable, what was not understandable was how Tilda and Crispin thought the other was in love with someone else. Once it was reveled that Crispin was happy his potential bride was in love with his cousin and he let it be known to all concerned that should have cleared the way for his pursuit of Tilda. He also told Tilda directly why he was thinking about marrying, which should have clearly let her know he was not in love with her cousin. Crispin also was extremely dense regarding Tilda's love or lack thereof for Crispin's cousin when it was finally revealed she did not sleep with him. Don't get me wrong this was a wonderful book and I recommend it just be prepared for a very drawn out misunderstanding.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Really enjoyable, February 9, 2010
I really enjoyed this book and have become a great fan of Elizabeth Rolls. I especially enjoyed the way Mathilda had overcome the adversity of living with vile relations and I loved the Duke. The grand 'misunderstanding' did get a little tedious at times but I thought there was real passion between the main characters that really engaged me as reader.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Definitely Can Read More Than Once, February 12, 2012
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Although I felt that the confusion in the plot was truly predictable, not much else about the story is. This is about a woman taking charge and accepting her her life as it has been handed to her; essentially playing by her own rules after being subservient for so long. I love all of the books by Elizabeth Rolls, but am especially pleased with this one. The plot is fresh and I have been able to read this one several times without becoming bored.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining Enough, August 25, 2011
I thought this book entertaining enough, the story being a good solid one with good strong characters. I didn't think it was necessary to throw in a small mystery the story could have stood alone but it didn't hurt the story any. The misunderstandings were to numerous to count it got a bit tedious especially by the end when still things were confused between the H/h. I guess I'm evil but I would have liked the author to have made Tilda's Aunt/Uncle suffer a bit more for their treatment of Tilda but it is what it is. Enjoy P.S. A few sex scenes not so very detailed
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5.0 out of 5 stars I loved it!, January 14, 2011
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This review is from: The Unruly Chaperon (Kindle Edition)
I love most of ER's books and I have to say I thought that this book was well written and I liked that there was some diversity and it takes place somewhere other than London.
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The Unruly Chaperon
The Unruly Chaperon by ELIZABETH ROLLS
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