Good Duke Gone Wild by Bethany Bennett

Good Duke Gone Wild (Bluestocking Booksellers, #1)Good Duke Gone Wild by Bethany Bennett

Tracy’s Rating: 3.5/4 of 5 stars

Series: Bluestocking Booksellers, #1

Release Date: August 20, 2024

After resigning herself to spinsterhood, Caroline “Caro” Danvers embarked on a secret career writing erotic novels under the pen name of Blanche Clementine. Her goal is to earn enough money to purchase a cottage and live independently, and she is close to her goal. But when her straightlaced vicar father finds her stash of cash along with her publishing contracts and her novels, he confiscates everything, kicks her out with nothing but clothes on her back and the manuscript she had with her and disowns her. She makes her way to London, to the home (and business) of her Aunt Mary and Uncle Owen and her cousins Hattie and Constance “Connie”, it is a grueling trip and she is exhausted, but she has the shop in her sites, when she is knocked into by a man, her manuscript goes flying, the man graciously helps her and apologizes for running into her, but she barely hears him, she is mesmerized by him. She soon learns he is Dorian Whitaker, the Duke of Holland, a widower and a patron of the shop. For the next year and a half, she stays out of his way but uses him as inspiration in her novels. It isn’t until he asks her to help him sell his late wife’s library that these two finally begin to interact. But when love letters to his late wife from secret lover turn up in the books she is selling, they will have to work together to find answers to help the duke put his past to rest. Caro can’t help falling for Dorian, but she is realistic, she knows that he needs to find a wife and she can be nothing more than an affair. But it seems like Dorian might want more, that is until her biggest secret is exposed and threatens to cost her everything.

Dorian loved his wife Juliet, but they married young and were separated when he was sent into diplomatic service, and she refused to join him on the continent. Sadly, Juliet died while he was away and upon his return, he learns of her affair. This knowledge crushes him, and he is consumed with learning why his marriage failed. He also wants to cut ties with his late wife’s no-good cousin Timothy, especially now that his mother is nagging him to remarry. He decides to sell Juliet’s library, one to give Timothy the proceeds as a final payment of sorts and to remove the trace of Juliet in his home as a courtesy to a new wife. He asks Caro to help him with the task and is overjoyed that he finally has a reason to spend time with the lovely bookseller that he has been dreaming of since the first day he met her. Things are going well between them, and Dorian decides that she is the woman he wants to spend his life with. But when he makes a mistake and hurts her after learning her secret, he will have to work very hard to regain the ground he lost. Will he be able to make things right or is he doomed to always lose the women he loves?

This was the start of a new series, and this book nicely sets it up without losing focus on the romance between Caro and Dorian. The book started out a bit slow, but around the halfway point, it picks up speed and doesn’t slow down until the very end. I enjoyed this book, but at times I was annoyed with Caro, I have no problem with a strong woman, but her morals and ideals are not in keeping with era the author chose to set her story in. It might be historical nitpicking, but what is the point of reading historical romance if the heroine is essentially a 21st century woman in period dress? That said, this was a very sweet romance with likable characters, great secondary characters, a bit of mystery, steamy love scenes, a cinnamon roll (beta) hero, an intelligent heroine, dreams, a bit of angst, and finally a lovely ending that includes their HEA and an epilogue. This is the first book in a new series that promises to be filled with strong women and the men who love them.

*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. *

Hot Earl Summer by Erica Ridley

Hot Earl Summer (The Wild Wynchesters, #5)Hot Earl Summer by Erica Ridley

Tracy’s Rating: 2.5/3 of 5 stars

Series: The Wild Wynchesters, #5

Release Date: August 6, 2024

With the popularity (or maybe infamy) of the Wynchester family at an all-time high, the siblings have more cases than they can handle as a team. So, when they get a case to find a missing will and claim the castle from the Earl of Densmore (that may or may not have been lost to the Wynchester’s archenemy, Viscount Reddington), it is determined that Elizabeth, (the sword-wielding, pain-ridden Wynchester) will have to take this case on her own. She leaves for Castle Harbrook, intent on confronting her client’s nephew, the Earl of Densmore and demanding the deed to the castle to be given to his aunt as his mother wanted, so she can open an orphanage that they had planned for years. But instead of the earl, she finds the earl’s very handsome cousin, Stephen Lenox. After being refused entry, Elizabeth goes “Beth the Berserker” on the front door. When she finally gets in, she finds the castle filled with boobytraps and odd inventions, all thanks to Stephen, but he has no idea where the earl is and has been trying to keep Reddington from claiming the castle. With a only the late countess’s letters to provide vague clues to the will’s hiding place, Elizabeth sets out to solve this mystery and maybe even enjoy a tryst with Stephen.

Stephen Lenox, heir presumptive to his cousin the Earl of Densmore, is a reclusive inventor, who normally wouldn’t leave his estate, but felt obliged to help his cousin, one the few people to ever stick up for him. His cousin asked him to stay at the castle for a “few days” and make Reddington think that Stephen was him, but his cousin has been missing for weeks. In the time Densmore has been missing, Stephen has improved the earldom and reinforced the security of the castle. Until Elizabeth arrived, Stephen felt like a prisoner, but now leaving is the last thing on his mind, but it is clear that while Elizabeth is attracted to Stephen and would be open to an affair, it would seem that her plans for the future do not include him. But the more time he spends with her, the more he wants forever.

I thought I was going to like this book a lot more than I did. It was just too much – too wacky, too modern, too annoying, too wordy, too slow moving and too over-the-top. Additionally, I found Elizabeth hard to like, she is just too vicious and blood-thirsty to be truly likable, her aversion to children was also off-putting and she came across as very self-centered. I did find the fact that she battled chronic pain to be a fascinating plot point but sadly it seemed to get lost in the bizarreness of the story. I liked Stephen, but he too was a bit much. This entire series is just not my cuppa – it is silly, slap-stick humor, mixed with 21st century morals and ideals, thrown into a 19th century setting with no fear of consequence. I know there are a lot of readers who don’t mind that in historical romance, and those readers might well enjoy this book series, but I am not in that group.

*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. *