Miss Prim and the Duke of Wylde by Stephanie Laurens

Miss Prim and the Duke of Wylde (Cynsters Next Generation #13)Barbara’s rating: 3.5 out of 5 Stars
Series: Cynster Next Generation #13
Publication Date: 8/17/23
Period: Early Victorian
Number of Pages: 444

A funny thing happened on the way to the proposal. Drago Helmsford, Duke of Wylde, must marry before his thirty-fifty birthday. (Yes, it is another of those stories where an otherwise loving father messes up his kid’s life by including really asinine things in his will – and this time, for really asinine reasons). His parents were a love match, but he never thought he’d have one as well, so upon advice from his Aunt Edith, he decides to propose to Alison Melwin. He met her once and she was quiet, shy, unassuming, and shouldn’t cause any trouble. The night before he is to propose, he and his friends really tie one on – rip-roaring-drunk. So, he passes out the next day on his way to propose – out cold – on a lonely stretch of road. Only to be rescued by a lovely young lady. And to repay her good deed – well – the two of them are discovered as she’s helping him into his cottage (actually upstairs to his bed). Not only discovered, but he just happened to be kissing her when his aunt, her companion, Alison, and Alison’s mother walked in. OOPS. He doesn’t know who the young woman who rescued him is, but the only way to save her is to announce their betrothal. Then, he finds out she is a Cynster. OMGoodness!

Meg Cynster is approaching her tenth season and is in the country assessing what she wants to do with the rest of her life. Obviously, she won’t be a wife and mother because she’s never found even one gentleman who remotely interested her. While she’s out gathering herbs, she comes across a man who appears dead, draped across the seat of a very expensive curricle. She doesn’t know him, but the two farmhands who are also there, but can’t handle his horses, tell her which cottage he is staying in. Even totally passed out drunk he’s handsome and appeals to her. The real trouble starts when she gets him to the cottage and no one is there. How can she get a man who is twice her size into the cottage alone? She cannot leave him outside with a storm on the way. Then, he kisses her – and she lets him.

With an agreement for a pretend betrothal, they go about fooling friends and family alike – until they aren’t fooling. But then, there are the attacks. Is someone trying to harm Meg? Or is it Drago they are after? Neither of them has any enemies – none. So, who could want to harm either of them? Why?

For me, it was an okay read, but I probably wouldn’t read it a second time. While it was written in the typical Laurens style, it was slow-moving with very little excitement. Even the attacks were over before they’d started. Mostly, it was descriptions of the many entertainments they attended and the political affiliations they were making. I really liked Meg and Drago and some of the supporting characters such as his mother and Alison. I loved that there were so many Cynsters who made appearances – from Devil and Hooria to the more recently married cousins. Meg’s brother Toby also gets a bit of page-time in this story and that is nice because his book is next. At the end of this book, there is a synopsis of several other Laurens books and one of those was Devil Cynster’s book – the first of the series. I read the sample chapter of that book and it made me realize that the author has changed her writing style over the years. The first chapter or so of that book was fast-paced, and exciting, and made me want to read it again. Perhaps I’m wrong, but the style just seems different now.

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The Duke and the Dressmaker by Eva Devon

The Duke and the Dressmaker (Once Upon a Wallflower #2)The Duke and the Dressmaker by Eva Devon

Tracy’s rating: 4 of 5 stars

Series: Once Upon a Wallflower, #2

Release Date: September 4, 2023

Despite being the granddaughter of a rich and powerful duke, Lily Martin has not had an easy life. Her grandfather disowned Lily’s mother when she married for love and she and her new husband fled to France. They raised a family and lived quite happily in France, but then the revolution claimed her parents, leaving Lily all alone. So Lily took her baby sister Violet and escaped the terror by returning to England, but England was no refuge for them when her grandfather refused to see them. Lily got work as a seamstress and soon found herself working long hours for pennies, and no matter what she does, there seems to be no way to stop being a drudge and fulfilling her dreams of owning her own shop. But all that changes when a very bad decision ends up changing her life for the better.

American shipping magnate, James Blakefield, never expected to become an English duke and had no desire to stay in England, but he too has dreams and knows that being a rich and powerful duke could come in handy for stopping the atrocities being done by the East India Company. He just needs to find a way to garner support in Parliament, and then find someone trustworthy to manage his estate, so he can return to Boston. But first, he must find his ward – the old duke’s granddaughter Violet Martin. So far he has had no luck, but a chance encounter in a tavern with a damsel whom he thought was in distress, turns out to be his ward’s sister and may be the answer to all his problems. He just needs to convince her that they can solve each other’s problems, without any messy emotions like love getting in the way. It is a perfect plan until it isn’t…

This is another well-written, nicely-paced installment of the “Once Upon a Wallflower” series, this time featuring Lily, the best friend of Elizabeth from the previous book. It is clear from the start that Lily and James share an amazing connection, but they have both been hurt by those who should have loved them, and both refuse to let themselves fall in love. But they both soon learn that love doesn’t always give you a choice and that trusting someone with your heart may be the scariest thing you have ever done, but the reward is far greater than the risk if you are willing to take a chance. This book is filled with dreams, fears, great secondary characters, bad choices, grand gestures, friends who tell it like it is, second chances, and finally a HEA complete with an epilogue. I enjoyed this story, not quite as much as the first book, but still a book I would be happy to recommend. This is the second book in the series, but it could easily be read as a standalone title as the books are loosely connected.

*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.*