Love, The Duke by Amelia Grey

Love, The Duke (Say I Do, #3)Love, The Duke by Amelia Grey

Tracy’s Rating: 3/3.5 of 5 stars

Series: Say I Do, #3

Release Date: April 1, 2025

While on a much-needed getaway with his two best friends, Drake “Hurst” Kingsley, the Duke of Hurstbourne, receives an urgent message from an old and dear childhood friend, Winston Stowe. Winston is dying and asks Hurst if he would consider marrying his sister Ophelia. Hurst is a romantic and has always believed that he would know immediately when he meets the woman he should marry. So, despite his love for his friend, he tells him he cannot marry Ophelia sight unseen but promises to visit soon. A promise he intended on keeping, but one that got pushed off when he returned to London and had to deal with dire circumstances on his estate. Weeks later he receives a late-night visitor who arrives in disguise. The young “man” is actually Ophelia Stowe, and he learns the sad truth that Winston has passed away and Ophelia needs his help. A chalice from the parish has been stolen and she needs to find it before a new vicar takes over and Winston is labeled a thief. Hurst is stunned by Ophelia and in his unsettled state, he refuses to help her. But Ophelia won’t take no for an answer and eventually, Hurst agrees to help her. The more time he spends with her, the more convinced he is that she is “the one” and he offers marriage. But if he thinks marriage will tame his stubborn wife, he obviously doesn’t know her and it is clear that their road to HEA won’t be the fairy tale that Hurst always thought it would be.

When her brother Winston dies, Ophelia and her mother find out that a priceless relic has been stolen from the church’s inventory and know that her dear brother’s memory will be slandered and besmirched unless they can find it before the new vicar arrives and discovers the thief. Her housekeeper witnessed the thief leaving and saw the family crest on the carriage, but she didn’t get a good look at the man. With this clue, Ophelia and her mother go to London, hoping to find the Chalice, but she knows she will need help and despite her anger with him for not visiting her brother, Ophelia decides to ask Hurst to help her. When he refuses to go along with her plan, she is more determined than ever to find it, but Hurst isn’t as easy to manage as she assumed. She can’t deny her attraction to him or the deeper feelings that are forming, but nothing will alter her course – not even love. Will she find the chalice and restore her brother’s reputation, or will she lose everything, even the man she loves?

This installment of the “Say I do” series was the best of the bunch, but honestly, it still didn’t wow me. I loved Hurst, but I found Ophelia much harder to like. I understood her desire to protect her brother, but I thought she was too abrasive and unyielding, not to mention foolish. I also had a hard time believing they were “in love” – why? Everything he did made her angry and everything she did annoyed him – it just didn’t feel like falling in love to me. Overall, I thought the mystery was pretty good, but I found the romance lacking. This is the third and final book in the series, but it could easily be read as a standalone title.

*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. *

How to Court a Rake by Bronwyn Scott

How to Court a Rake (Wed Within a Year Book 1)How to Court a Rake by Bronwyn Scott

Tracy’s Rating: 4.5 of 5 stars

Series: Wed Within a Year, #1

Release Date: April 1, 2025

As the grandson of the Earl of Sandmore, Caine Parkhurst and three brothers work for their grandfather as operatives known as the Four Horsemen. But the ton see them as rakes – a cover the brothers are happy to cultivate. Caine meets Lady Mary Kimber, the daughter of the Earl of Carys, while attending a ball, seeking information about a traitor. Normally, he would avoid an “innocent” like the plague, but she intrigues him, so much so he asks her to dance and then ends up humiliating her by leaving in the middle of the dance. His reason for leaving was not voluntarily, his grandfather ordered the brothers to go to Wapping to catch a traitor set on sabotaging a ship sailing to Greece. During this mission his younger brother Stepan goes missing and leads directly to Caine being bestowed the title of Marquess of Barrow and lesser titles for his brothers. Titles that will only become hereditary if they marry within a year, a condition Caine has no intention of honoring. Caine is heartbroken over the loss of Stepan, but he isn’t ready to believe he is dead and there is still a traitor to find. This brings him back to Lady Mary, as her father may be assisting the traitor. He never expected to like her so much and when she suggests he court her to stall her father’s plans to marry her off, he is more than happy to comply. But he never planned on falling in love and knows that she will probably hate him once she realizes his reason for seeking her out. A HEA seems unlikely, but one never knows when love is involved.

After years of being a dutiful daughter and a perfect debutante, yet still being passed over by two dukes, her parents have decided that enough is enough and have told Mary that if she doesn’t find an acceptable husband this season, they will arrange a marriage for her. When her path crosses with Caine something inside her rebels and she allows herself to be bold, but it backfires when he leaves her on the dancefloor, damaging her already fragile reputation. But when he calls on her the next day to make amends, she never imagined that her live was about to change and her heart will never be the same.

This was the start to a new series and if this book is anything to go by, I am all in! I enjoyed this book so much, it has wonderful characters, a bit of espionage, a mystery, some steamyish love scenes, wonderful secondary characters, a bit of action, a really nasty villain, heartache, a hard-won HEA and not one by TWO epilogues. I am looking forward to the next book and would happily recommend this book to my fellow HR lovers!

*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. *