Duke of Midnight by Elizabeth Hoyt

Duke of Midnight (Maiden Lane, #6)Duke of Midnight by Elizabeth Hoyt

My Rating: 4 of 5 stars

Series: Maiden Lane, #6

Release Date: October 15, 2013

WHEN A MASKED MAN . . .

Twenty years ago Maximus Batten witnessed the brutal murders of his parents. Now the autocratic Duke of Wakefield, he spends his days ruling Parliament. But by night, disguised as the Ghost of St. Giles, he prowls the grim alleys of St. Giles, ever on the hunt for the murderer. One night he finds a fiery woman who meets him toe-to-toe—and won’t back down . . .

MEETS HIS MATCH . . .

Artemis Greaves toils as a lady’s companion, but hiding beneath the plain brown serge of her dress is the heart of a huntress. When the Ghost of St. Giles rescues her from footpads, she recognizes a kindred spirit-and is intrigued. She’s even more intrigued when she realizes who exactly the notorious Ghost is by day . . .

DESIRE IGNITES A DANGEROUS PASSION

Artemis makes a bold move: she demands that Maximus use his influence to free her imprisoned brother-or she will expose him as the Ghost. But blackmailing a powerful duke isn’t without risks. Now that she has the tiger by the tail, can she withstand his ire-or the temptation of his embrace?

My thoughts:

I love Elizabeth Hoyt’s style of writing – it is always fresh, edgy and the love scenes are steamy. Her books never have cookie cutter plots and you never put down a book by her feeling like you read the same story somewhere else.

This book is no exception. You have a rich powerful duke, a penniless companion, a spoiled relative vying for the duke, a lunatic relation and a very nasty villain. Sounds like a hundred other HR books you’ve read right? Wrong!

I really liked this installment of the Maiden Lane series – but there were a couple of things that really bothered me.

The first was Artemis’ relationship with Penelope – Artemis says and thinks constantly how sweet Penelope really is – but at the same time she seems like she is making fun of her right to her face because Penelope is too stupid to realize it. That made Artemis come across as a mean spiteful person at times.

The second was the relationship between Artemis and Maximus – it felt a bit too much like cheating to me – considering he is courting Penelope and has made it clear he will never marry Artemis. Artemis claims to love her cousin – but has an affair with the man she knows her cousin wants to marry with barely any thought of how it will affect Penelope. I wasn’t happy about this. I don’t like cheaters and I don’t like spending my hard earned money to read about them.

Honestly as much as I love EH’s books – I have to say this was disappointing to me. If the cousin wanting to marry the hero wasn’t such a big part of the book – I would have loved it. There was action, drama, heart wrench, joy and a hero with a very possessive sexual bent – but unfortunately I couldn’t get past the feeling that the heroine was the other woman and was going to hurt someone she claimed to love. I know they technically never cheated because Maximus was not actually betrothed to Penelope – but it was implied that it was going to happen and Artemis knew how Penelope felt – so in my opinion it was wrong.

I am looking forward to more books I this series – as this book left 3 very interesting men hanging off a cliff and I have to know what happens!!

When all is said and done – the book was well written, it was interesting and the story believable – I would recommend it with a warning to others who are sensitive about cheating.

The Devil’s Charm by Megan Frampton

The Devil's Charm (Heirs & Spares #1)The Devil’s Charm by Megan Frampton

Tracy’s Rating: 4 of 5 stars

Series: Heirs & Spares, #1

Release Date: February 25, 25

Lady Diantha Courtenay, the eldest daughter of the Earl of Courtenay, has spent most of her life trying to keep her parents in check, she is reliable, responsible and therefore a complete mystery to her family. She always does the right thing and hopes for a day when she can pursue her own dream of a quiet, stable life. But a stolen kiss with Lord Lucian Eldridge, the younger son of her father’s greatest foe, turns her whole world upside down and then to make matters worse, she learns that the cause of their parent’s feud has been decided by the courts and now she and Lucian must work together to find a solution to factory in question or their parents will risk losing the building to the crown, and while that would be unfortunate, the real risk might be the fact that she is losing her heart to a man that is exactly like her parents, a man she shouldn’t want.

Lord Lucian Eldridge, the younger son of the Duke of Waxford, has tried to please his father for most of his life and failed, Lucian likes being happy and enjoying himself, basically the complete opposite of his stodgy, duty-loving, rigid father. When his older brother is injured and his father has to attend him in Scotland, he leaves Lucian in charge of figuring out what to do with the factory the duke with the earl. Lucian is wondering if he can find someone to take over the job when he meets the earl’s daughter and shares a kiss that he can’t forget. He throws himself into the project and falls head over heels with a woman he can never have.

This was a quick, fun read, with a different plot and very likable characters. Diantha and Lucian are complete opposites and their fathers are enemies, but that doesn’t stop them from falling in love, but it may prevent them from finding their HEA. The romance part of the story was good, but there was a side story featuring the Duke’s cousin that just didn’t really impress me or add anything substantive to the story – if just felt like filler and made the story drag in places. Overall, it was an enjoyable read with wonderful characters, a bit of steam, some amusing scenes and finally a HEA that seemed almost impossible, and while it wasn’t quite the story that I have come to expect from Ms. Frampton, I would still be happy to recommend this title to HR readers who enjoy the enemies to lovers and the opposites attract tropes.

*I am voluntarily leaving a review for an eARC that I requested and was provided to me by the publisher/author. All opinions in this review are my own. *