Finding his future wife means revisiting his past…
After making a pact with his brother to find a bride by the year’s end, warrior Camron of Clan Graham faces his toughest battle yet: to win defiant Anna, his first love. She’s fiercely protective of her family and her independence, so Highlander Camron must prove to Anna that she’s more than just a bet—and that he’s a man she can trust with her safety and her heart!
Nicole first discovered romance novels hidden in her grandmother’s closet. Convinced hidden books must be better, Nicole greedily read them. It was only natural she should start writing them (but now not so secretly). If she isn’t working on the next book in her historical series, she can’t be found. No, seriously. Because she’s always working on the next story!
Giveaway – Win a Signed Copy of The Highlander’s Bridal Bid (Open Internationally)
*Terms and Conditions –Worldwide entries welcome. Please enter using the Rafflecopter box below. The winner will be selected at random via Rafflecopter from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then Rachel’s Random Resources reserves the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over. Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will be passed to the giveaway organizer and used only for fulfillment of the prize, after which time Rachel’s Random Resources will delete the data. I am not responsible for the despatch or delivery of the prize.
Anna of Clan Graham has not had an easy time in the last few years. Her mother died not long after birthing Anna’s brother, leaving a young Anna to raise her younger sister and brother. She devoted her life to them and believed that no one would ever want her. But then she met Alan Maclean and fell hard. She believed he was her future and gave him her heart and everything else. But she was not the only lass Alan was wooing and he shattered not only her heart, but her trust.
Camron of Clan Graham has been in love with Anna Graham for most of his life, but the time has never been right to pursue her. Being five years her junior was his first hurdle, then when he felt old enough to approach her, it seemed like she had found love with another. Faced with losing his chance with her, Camron tried to forget her and spent the next few years training and scouting for the clan. But now he is back and Anna is once again free, having had her heart broken. He decides that now is the time, especially after a night spent drinking with his twin brother Hamilton ends in a bet about who will marry first. He is sure he can win her, as long as she never learns of the wager…
This was a well-written, nicely-paced story of longing, love, and trust. This novel was a delight to read, I loved Camron’s dedication to winning Anna and his interactions with his brother. Anna was a bit harder to like, she has been hurt and trust is hard for her to give, which made her seem a bit shrewish. But her love for her family, especially her younger brother whose foot is misshapen and has made it hard for him to fit in with the other boys in the clan. She truly has a heart of gold, but betrayal left it a bit tarnished, lucky for her Camron would love nothing more than to be the man to bring back her shine. This is the first book in a new series and besides giving the reader a beautiful love story, we are given glimpses of the next book and possibly a third! I thoroughly enjoyed this book and would happily recommend it, especially for medieval and High-Middle Ages of Scotland lovers.
*I was gifted a copy of this title as part of a Blog Tour, but I purchased a copy for my library when the book was released. – All opinions in this review are my own.*
Release Day For Mary Balogh’s Remember Me, Book 2 of the Ravenswood Series
About the Book
Philippa, elder daughter of the Earl of Stratton, grew up eagerly anticipating a glittering debut and a brilliant marriage. Then her brother caught their father out in a clandestine affair and denounced him publicly. The whole family was disgraced, and Philippa’s hopes grew dim, then were fully shattered when she overheard the dashing, handsome Marquess of Roath viciously insult her upon learning of her father’s identity. Only years later does Philippa find the courage to go to London at last to meet the ton. She is an instant success and enjoys a close friendship with the granddaughter of a duke. Only one man can spoil everything for her, but surely he will not be in London this year.
The Duke of Wilby is nearing death and has tasked his grandson and heir, Lucas Arden, Marquess of Roath, with marrying and producing a son before it is too late. Lucas, who usually shuns London, goes there early in the Season in the hope of finding an eligible bride before his grandparents come and find one for him. He is instantly attracted to his sister’s new friend, until that young lady asks a simple question: “Remember me?” And suddenly he does remember her, as well as the reason why the daughter of the Earl of Stratton is the one woman he can never marry—even if his heart tells him she is the only woman he wants.
Unfortunately for Philippa and Lucas, the autocratic duke and his duchess have other ideas and believe them to be perfect for each other. They will simply not take no for an answer. Telling Philippa the full truth is the hardest thing Lucas has ever faced, and the discovery of it will change them both before they discover the healing power of love.
Photo Credit to Sharon Pelletier
About the Author
Mary Balogh has written more than one hundred historical novels and novellas, more than forty of which have been New York Times bestsellers. They include the Bedwyn saga, the Simply quartet, the Huxtable quintet, the seven-part Survivors’ Club series, and the Westcott series. Learn more online at www.marybalogh.com.
Lady Philippa “Pippa” Ware, the eldest daughter of the late Earl of Stratton and sister of the current earl, is preparing for her first season at the grand old age of twenty-two. She was set to make her debut at eighteen, but she decided not to go at the last minute, after overhearing Lord Roath, a handsome guest of a neighbor, learn she was the daughter of the Earl of Stratton, refused to dance with her and called her “soiled goods”. Pippa believed that it was all related to the scandal surrounding her father a few years earlier and was convinced everyone in London thought the same as Lord Roath. Her father’s death further delayed her debut which was followed by the death of her grandmother. When her brother Devlin, finally returns to take up his position as Earl, Philippa shares why she hasn’t had a season with him and he convinces her to go. It becomes clear that her fears were unfounded, she is accepted and even considered the catch of the season, she is also making friends, one who is especially dear is Lady Jennifer “Jenny” Arden, the granddaughter of the Duke of Wilby, who is unable to walk thanks to a childhood illness. Everything seems perfect until HE, Lucas Arden, Marquess of Roath, shows up and turns out to be Jenny’s brother and the duke’s heir, and he doesn’t seem to remember her or his insults. Once she sets him straight, he is mortified that she overheard his careless word, he apologizes and assures her that he was angry at her father, yet refuses to say why. Unwilling to forgive him, she vows to stay away from him. Too bad the Duke has decided that Philippa is the perfect wife for Lucas!
Lucas Arden, Marquess of Roath, hates London, and at twenty-six is in no rush to marry, but when his grandfather’s health begins to decline, he is told that he must find a bride and produce an heir as soon as possible. With no good reason to refuse, he agrees to participate in the season and find a wife. As luck would have it, he arrives at the family townhouse to find a tea party underway and his sister in conversation with one of the most beautiful women he has ever seen. Thinking that his search is over before it began, he gains an introduction to Lady Philippa Ware, but it isn’t until they are left alone that he learns who she is – the very last woman he should want to marry. And so begins a battle of wills, inconvenient attraction, and the promise of either HEA or heartbreak.
After being a tad bit disappointed by the previous book, I didn’t have high hopes for this book and almost passed on requesting a review copy – Thank goodness I decided to give it a go! This book was classic Mary Balogh and even had a cameo with Lady Morgan Bedwyn. It is a slow-burn romance between two people who have a good reason to stay apart but still find themselves drawn together. The book has secrets, cameos from former characters, a Duke used to getting his way, friendships, a bit of heartache, mild love scenes, a sweet ending, and an epilogue that brought me to tears. For me, the story moved a bit too slowly and was a solid four-star read until I read the epilogue – OMG – have your tissues ready! This is the second book in the series, but it could easily be read as a standalone title without any problem. I am happy to recommend this book and am already looking forward to the next installment.
*I am voluntarily leaving a review for an eARC that I requested and was provided to me by the publisher. All opinions in this review are my own.*
EXCERPT
Voices hummed all around them and glass and china clinked as the other guests feasted upon the sumptuous tea set out before them. Spoons scraped upon dishes of fruit trifle. Philippa glanced down at her plate and was surprised to see that the cucumber sandwich had disappeared. She even had the taste of it in her mouth.
But would this tea, to which she had looked forward with such eager anticipation, never be over? She felt as though she were suffocating. The room seemed unnaturally stuffy.
“I have just realized to my shame that I have not yet spoken with at least one third of our guests,” Jenny said as she set her napkin down on the table. “I was so absorbed in my conversation with Pippa before you arrived, Luc, that I neglected everyone else. And I kept you from mingling too, Pippa, though I know you have very few acquaintances in London and came here to make some. I do apologize.”
“We can put your first concern to rest without further delay, Jenny,” Sir Gerald said, getting to his feet. “I see your wheeled chair in the corner here beside the mantel. Let me get you into it, and we will move about together from table to table, greeting people we have not already spoken with.”
He was fetching the chair as he spoke. He bent over his cousin and, with what was obviously practiced ease, lifted her into it.
“That is kind of you, Gerald,” Jenny said. “But now I am abandoning Pippa after begging her to stay with me. Luc, will you be so good as to give her your company until everyone begins to move about again?”
“It will be my pleasure,” he said while Philippa smiled and her heart thumped uncomfortably and she felt robbed of breath.
The Marquess of Roath was on his feet, moving his chair out of the way so the wheeled chair could pass behind it, and bending to tuck the hem of his sister’s dress about her ankles so it would not catch beneath a wheel.
When he sat down again, he did not move his chair back to where it had been. It was now closer to Philippa than before. She was aware again of the voices around them, seeming to enclose them in a cocoon of silence, which neither of them broke for a few moments. Their eyes met. His were brown, but not very dark. There were hints of green in them. He opened his mouth to speak, but she forestalled him. She had learned something in the last seven or eight months, since Devlin’s return home from the wars. She had learned the importance of speaking truth rather than suppressing it and living with the illusion that all would be well in her world if only she kept quiet about what was not well.
“Remember me?” she said.
* * * * *
The sound of many voices talking at once had grown louder as more of the guests finished eating. A few had risen from their places and were moving about to talk with fellow guests at other tables. Lady Philippa Ware had spoken quietly. Lucas was not quite sure he had heard her correctly.
But all through tea, while the four of them had chatted amiably and shared family anecdotes and laughed over them—his and Jenny’s and Gerald’s on the one hand, Lady Philippa’s on the other—he had been dragging up a distant memory from that place in the mind where one stuffs away gaffes one would dearly love to obliterate altogether if only it were possible. It was a memory from four or five years ago of going to spend Easter with James Rutledge, a friend from his Oxford years. James lived with his parents and siblings somewhere close to the village of…Boscombe? Lucas thought that was the name. It was in Hampshire anyway. When he had accepted the invitation, he had had no idea that the Earl of Stratton lived at Ravenswood Hall, a mere stone’s throw from the village. He had discovered it within a day or two of his arrival, however. James had taken him—because he had thought it would amuse Lucas—to watch a crowd of his neighbors practice maypole dancing in someone’s large barn, or what was supposedly a barn. It had clearly not seen either animals or hay for many a year, if ever.
Lady Philippa was not going to speak again, it seemed, until he did. But her eyes—those large, very blue eyes—did not waver from his own. And though she had spoken quietly, she had also spoken quite distinctly. He did not need to have her repeat the words.
Remember me?
“Have we met before, Lady Philippa?” he asked. But he had the ghastly feeling that they had.