Ne’er Duke Well by Alexandra Vasti – Review

Ne'er Duke WellBarbara’s rating: 3.3 out of 5
Series: I wish I knew, but it is part of a series
Publication Date: 7/23/24
Period: Regency – London
Number of Pages: 352

This author delivered a good first full-length novel with likable characters and plenty of her signature steam and wit. Some scenes had me laughing out loud and others made me smile because, overall, it was a happy book. I think Peter and Selina had the chemistry going, but I would have liked to see how we got there. I rather felt as if I’d been dropped into the romance in the middle of the second act – rather than seeing it unfurl as it grew. Our hero, Peter, was NOT an alpha male, but 😊I think maybe our heroine was an alpha female. Peter did, however, have his swoon-worthy moments. 😊 I liked all the characters, but I thought Peter’s half-sister was a bit over-the-top. I am glad to have read this book even though I did get a tad bored at times and found it draggy in spots.

Our story follows Peter Kent, born and raised in New Orleans to a third (or more) son of the Duke of Stanhope. Peter never expected nor wanted to inherit a title, much less that of Duke, but he couldn’t turn down the opportunity to present anti-slavery legislation in the House of Lords. Upon arriving in England three years ago, he discovered he had illegitimate half-siblings, a boy and a girl. He now has two goals – end slavery as best he can and gain guardianship of his half-siblings.

Selina Ravenscroft is a very modern woman – and a very managing one. She is a ‘fixer’ who fixes everything for everybody – whether they want it fixed or not. She is a brilliant ray of sunshine who sees the best in every situation and wants to make it right. So, when she learns Peter wants to gain guardianship of his half-siblings, she takes right over fixing it for him. Her solution? Peter needs to marry a very respectable English lady who hasn’t had a hint of scandal in her family for the last hundred years. Selina also has a secret – and it is the reason she cannot be the lady who marries Peter. Selina owns a lending library – but – that lending library makes some very scandalous literature available to the ladies of the ton – married and unmarried. She wants those ladies to learn what they need to do to keep from being taken advantage of by unscrupulous men – and contraception – and well, the mechanics of how it all works.

I really liked the three ladies Selina chooses for Peter and while they weren’t right for him, I know we’ll be seeing them in future books in the series. I am looking forward to those books and the next features Selina’s best friend, Lydia Hope-Wallace.

So, overall, this was a nice, witty, steamy book, that I am glad to have read, but wouldn’t read a second time because I thought the bland and boring times outweighed those flashes of brilliant wit and steam.

I voluntarily read and reviewed an Advanced Reader Copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

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The Highlander’s Wild Flame by Heather McCollum – Review

The Highlander’s Wild Flame

Barbara’s rating: 3.5 out of 5 Stars
Series: Brotherhood of Solway Moss #1
Publication Date: 7/23/24
Period: Medieval – 1544 – Isle of Skye, Scotland
Number of Pages: 384

The prologue briefly acquaints us with the four members of the Brotherhood and how it came to be. For me personally, I would have liked that expanded a bit to learn more about their actual escape and the formation of the Brotherhood rather than just learning their escape was successful and they had formed a Brotherhood. These were four expendable members of their clan who had been given to the English for imprisonment in place of a non-expendable member. No, these weren’t common clan members – they were sons and even heirs to the Lairdships of their clans. All were from various warring clans from the Isle of Skye – sworn enemies – who had to learn to work together so they could escape their captivity. I don’t know if we’ll learn more over the course of the series, but I would have liked to see it in this book. There are plenty of spots that could have been skipped or shortened so the Brotherhood formation could have been expanded.

This book follows Rory MacLeod and Seraphina (Sara) MacDonald, but we also learn more about Sara’s brother Kenan who was imprisoned with Rory in the English prison. We also get an interesting set-up for the second book in the series which will feature Kenan.

Rory MacLeod is the second son of Laird Alasdair MacLeod who is a mean, manipulative, hateful, deceitful man who rules his clan with an iron fist. Rory’s brother, Jamie, heir to the lairdship, is a carbon copy of his father. Both Jamie and the Laird have always taken great pleasure in tormenting and manipulating Rory – even to the point of turning him over to the English to serve in Jamie’s place. Oh! They promised they would ransom him out – but they never did. So, over a lifetime, Rory had learned to never, ever, trust anyone – and the one time he did, she was a traitor and spy.

Sara MacDonald, daughter to Laird Walter MacDonald, has grown up as the target of her father’s wrath and ridicule. While she could have grown bitter, wrathful, distrustful, and disdainful, she was a protector and peacemaker instead. Sara was truthful, always truthful, even when a lie would have saved her from harm or humiliation.

Sara has no love for the MacLeod clan because she has always been taught that they are the enemy and only want to destroy the MacDonald clan. However, she agrees to wed Jamie MacLeod to unite the clans and bring peace. Her father’s actions directly after the wedding shocked her! He locked the entire leadership of the MacLeod clan in the church where the wedding ceremony had just taken place and set the church on fire to burn them all to death. At great risk to her own life, Sara finds a way to save them – only to be met with calls for her own death.

There are spies, thieves, and murderers within Clan MacLeod and it is their mission to make Sara appear to be the guilty party. Do they succeed? They do in a way because Rory is very distrustful of anyone and everyone – especially a female MacDonald. Rory was distrustful of Sara in his head, but in his heart, he felt differently. Sadly, too many times Rory allowed his head to rule.

I did enjoy this book and I thought it was a good setup for the second book and the series. That said, I think Rory’s head ruling his heart went on for too long. Another thing was the issue of the ‘annulment’ of Jamie and Sara’s marriage. Just because the priest agreed and the marriage documents were destroyed as soon as the ceremony was over, I believe the marriage would still have been binding at that time in Scotland. During that period in Scotland, all you had to do was declare you were married before witnesses – and you were married – you didn’t even need a priest. So, the marriage was witnessed by both clans – and should have still been legal. After reading some reviews, I was surprised to find that I not only tolerated but somewhat liked Rory. Sara was my favorite character and I was happy to see her get her HEA – and the setup for the next book sounded like a fun introduction to the heroine.

I voluntarily read and reviewed an Advanced Reader Copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

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