My Dearest Duke by Collette Cameron

My Dearest Duke (Seductive Scoundrels #13)My Dearest Duke by Collette Cameron

Tracy’s rating: 4 of 5 stars

Series: Seductive Scoundrels, #13 (Originally Published as Loved by the Lyon)

Release Date: November 20, 2023 (reissued)

Vanessa Becket is mere days away from gaining her inheritance when her odious step-brother Owen Elligon goes too far. For weeks Vanessa has known that Owen has been stealing from her, but she has turned a blind eye, until now, when he stole an heirloom left to her by her mother, that has passed from mother to daughter for generations, and with the recent death of both her brother and mother, she cannot lose anything else connected to her true family. So Vanessa tracks Owen to Fortuna, a notorious gaming hell and social club, owned by the infamous Mrs. Dorrian-Lane aka The Wicked Widow of Whitechapel, a well-known matchmaker for the elite. Vanessa makes her way into the club and manages to find Owen, but before she can confront him, she is caught by an employee and comes face to face with a man she hasn’t seen in years – Kingston Barclay, her late brother Gabriel’s best friend. When Owen arrives on the scene, declaring himself Vanessa’s guardian and promptly informs her he has promised her in marriage, Mrs. Dorrian-Lane gets involved and offers another idea, that Vanessa marry Kingston, after all, he was there to hire her to find him an heiress.

Kingston returned from the war a changed man, not just because of the wounds he endured, he also harbors incredible guilt over the death of his best friend, Gabriel Becket, that guilt was magnified upon learning that his father passed away leaving his siblings penniless and alone to fend for themselves. Kingston is the heir presumptive to the Duke of Caerleon, but the duke hates him and won’t help his family, leaving Kingston with no choice but to marry a heiress. But because of the vow he made upon Gabriel’s death and the secret Kingston must keep from her, there is no way he can marry Vanessa, or is there? When Vanessa proposes a temporary marriage, it seems like the perfect solution, until he falls in love with the one woman he can never have.

This was a well-written, nicely-paced story with very likable characters and a lot of emotion. Kingston and Vanessa have a great rapport, making it very easy to root for their happily ever after. The story has a lot of emotion, some heartache, secrets, family, healing, very mild to almost closed-door love scenes, forgiveness, and finally their HEA complete with an epilogue. I did feel like Kingston’s secret was built up to be a major plot point and ended up being anti-climatic, but ultimately it didn’t diminish my enjoyment and I would happily recommend this book to my fellow HR readers. This book was originally published as Loved by the Lyon and is now being republished as a part of the Seductive Scoundrels series, with ties to several other series.

4 stars

*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.*

You’re the Duke That I Want by Lenora Bell

You're the Duke That I Want (The Thunderbolt Club, #1)You’re the Duke That I Want by Lenora Bell

Tracy’s rating: 3 of 5 stars

Series: The Thunderbolt Club, #1

Release Date: December 26, 2023

Sandrine Oliver lives in the quiet village of Squalton-On-Sea and is a devoted and dutiful daughter to her mother who is a paranoid pessimist who spouts the dangers of men and life in general, and who is bent on seeing Sandrine married to the town’s vicar. So when Sandrine is not being lectured by her mother, or pressured to marry the village vicar, she spends her time researching the crumbling Manor house that used to be owned by her father’s family but was lost centuries ago to the Duke of Rydell. Sandrine has tried to contact the duke many times, hoping he will fix up the house or give it to the Squalton Historicial Preservation and Improvement Society (of which she is the secretary), but much to her dismay, he has ignored her. But all that changes one hot afternoon when Sandrine uncharacteristically defies her mother and takes a dip in the sea, only to be accosted by a man claiming to be saving her from drowning. She soon finds herself falling for Danny, who disappears without a word. It is also the same man she sees later in London with a group of rakes, but this man is not the sweet, man she met in Squalton-on-Sea, nor is he Danny Smith, no, he is Dane Walker, the presumed Duke of Rydell and it that is not bad enough, he is pretending to not to know her!

Lord Dane Walker is the “spare heir” to his brother, the Duke of Rydell, and a founding member of the Thunderbolt Club, a group of young rakes who like racing carriages and fast women. He is in the sleepy town of Squalton-on-Sea to check out Squaltonn Manor, a property his father left him, but it is not long before he realizes his family is hated in the small town, so he tells the locals his name is Danny Smith. He sees the manor and knows that it is not the windfall he believed it to be, it is in dire need of repair and anyone buying it will probably want to raze the building and start from scratch, especially given the general air of neglect and disrepair of the entire town. Disappointed, he plans to return to Brighton but is stymied when his horse comes up lame. Instead, he wanders down to the manor and is shocked to see a woman splashing alone in the sea, he promptly saves her and finds himself captivated. Maybe staying in Squalton for a few days won’t be too bad. Sandrine is lovely, smart, and not his type at all, meaning, she is too good for him, yet that doesn’t stop him from craving her. But when he receives notice that his brother has died, he leaves without a second thought, never expecting to see her again.

When I saw that Lenora Bell was launching a new series I was excited. And when I read the blurb and requested this book from NetGalley, I was under the impression that this book was “Grease-inspired”, but a few chapters in I realized that was a huge understatement, this is a straight-up retelling of the 1970 movie classic set in Georgian England with only a few deviations. That said – if you have ever seen Grease then you will immediately see the similarities, from Danny to the Pink Ladies. And if you are a fan of the movie, you will probably be highly entertained. As for me, I liked the movie but didn’t LOVE it, and I felt the same as this book, it was OK, the writing was good and the love scenes were definitely steamier than the movie, but after waiting over a year for a new story, I felt a bit let down and wished Ms. Bell had put her own spin on the story instead of making minor alterations to adapt a well-known movie into an historical romance novel.

3 stars

*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.*