A Waltz with the Outspoken Governess by Catherine Tinley – Blog Tour

A Waltz with the Outspoken Governess

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A Waltz with the Outspoken Governess

A quiet governess…
An unruly heart
Sir Nicholas Denny is desperate to find a governess to care for his boisterous nieces and nephews. Demure vicar’s daughter Mary Smith seems ideal—at first. All too soon Nicholas discovers a different side to her… She’s a beautiful, vivacious woman, even if she infuriates him with her strong opinions! When he waltzes with Mary at a party he knows he’s in trouble—the spark between them is so tempting, but she challenges everything he thought he wanted in a wife!

Purchase Links: 
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The Earl's Runaway Governess Tinley 6 dog
Author Bio

Catherine Tinley is an award winning author who writes witty, heartwarming, Regency love stories for Harlequin Mills & Boon. She has loved reading and writing since childhood, and has a particular fondness for love, romance, and happy endings. After a career encompassing speech & language therapy, NHS management, maternity campaigning and being President of a charity, she now manages a maternity hospital. She lives in Ireland with her husband, children, and dog and can be reached at http://www.catherinetinley.com, as well as http://www.facebook.com/CatherineTinleyWriter and @CatherineTinley on twitter.

Social Media Links:

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Tracy’s Review

A Waltz with the Outspoken GovernessA Waltz with the Outspoken Governess by Catherine Tinley

Tracy’s rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

Release Date: January 1, 2021

After years of being raised solely by her studious father, Vicar Smith, and being encouraged to speak her mind, he decides that Mary needs a more formal ladies’ education and sends her off to the Plumpton Academy for Young Ladies. Mary is miserable there but agrees to stay for a year to make her father happy. But she has only been there for 3 months when she gets the terrible news that her father has been arrested for treason! She is promptly turned out of school and needs to find a way to get to Norfolk where her father is being held. In a rare show of kindness, the headmistress recommends Mary to Mrs. Gray’s employment agency and as luck would have it, Mrs. Gray has a temporary governess position available in Norfolk, very close to the Brightwell prison where her father is being held. She offers Mary the position but warns her to remember that her behavior reflects on the agency and that she must keep her opinions to herself.

Sir Nicholas Denny is preparing for an invasion, his sister is coming to Stiffkey Hall for a long visit and is bringing her five unruly children. Nicholas loves his family, but as a bachelor, he is unused to the noise children generate and as a scholar, he desires peace and quiet, so in an effort to keep things as normal as possible, he instructs his secretary to hire additional help, including a governess. He is not prepared for his reaction to Mary, he is immediately attracted to her, but is a bit disappointed that she is so demure and reserved.

For her part, Mary struggles to control herself and to conform to her new lower station in life. She doesn’t tell anyone about her father, but wonders if she can trust Sir Nicholas with the truth. Slowly Nicholas is able to bring the real Mary out of hiding, but this just ends up causing him more grief when she speaks her mind about him and makes him examine his life and what possible place she could have in it. After Nicholas has a rather nasty confrontation with his sister’s governess, everything goes wrong for Mary and she loses her position and leaves. Nicholas is beside himself when he learns she is gone –can he find her and tell her his true feelings or is it too late for him?

This was an interesting story; it is definitely not your run-of-the-mill historical romance and Mary is certainly not your average heroine. While the writing was good, the story did drag a bit in the middle and the ending was a bit of a mad dash to the finish. Overall, it was a good read, different and out of the ordinary. I don’t know if I would call Mary “outspoken” as much as I would say she is quick to judge and condemn and doesn’t always think before she speaks, she is, however, usually sorry for her words and is not above asking for forgiveness. The romance in the story is very subdued and the love scenes are nothing more than a couple of kisses. So, if you are looking for something with no steam that is a bit off of the norm – this book is for you!

*I am voluntarily leaving a review for an eARC that I requested and was provided to me by the publisher.*

 

The Viscount’s Convenient Bride by Josie Bonham #BlogTour

The Viscounts Convenient Bride

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Luke, Viscount Enstone’s, resolve to avoid a love match is tested to its limit when he accepts responsibility for the Davenport family.

Luke has found it hard to sort out his late father’s affairs. A dishonest secretary and ailing land agent have left the family estates in disorder. With new people in place, he sets off to one of his smaller properties to discover the extent of an obligation that seems out of keeping with the cold-hearted father he remembers. Who is the young woman living at Shepley Hall and what was her connection to his father?

Miss Kitty Davenport has waited for a long time to find out if the new Viscount Enstone will continue the support his father gave to her family and her patience is wearing thin. Will he carry on paying for her young brother’s education and even assist him in finding a career? For herself, all she needs is help to find a suitable position as a companion and to escape from the unwanted attentions of a persistent suitor.

Purchase Links: UK ~ US

The Viscounts Author photo May 2020 (2)

Author Bio:

Josie lives in the English midlands, surrounded by towns full of history such as Evesham, Stratford-Upon- Avon, Warwick and Worcester. Which is perhaps why her favourite reads are historical. Out of all the periods to choose from the Regency Era stirs her imagination the most. The true Regency lasted from 1811 until 1820 but dates as wide as 1789 to 1837 have been included in the extended Regency period. For Josie the true flavour of this period emerges after the iniquitous hair powder tax of 1795, unsurprisingly, scuppered the fashion for hair powder almost overnight.
Josie has always dabbled in stories but it took the combined efforts of her sister and eldest niece to set her on the path to writing novels. Her Regency romances, with a dash of adventure and intrigue, are the result.

Connect with Josie:

WebsiteTwitter ~ Facebook

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Tracy’s Review:

 

The Viscount’s Convenient Bride by Josie Bonham

Tracy’s rating: 3 of 5 stars

Series: Reluctant Brides, #2


Months after the death of her aunt, Kitty Davenport is getting desperate. Her mother died long ago, leaving her and her younger brother alone with their grieving father, Sir Henry Davenport. But when Sir Henry gambled away their home and fortune, they were taken in by her aunt, but her father died not long after. Upon the death of her aunt’s husband, her aunt contacted Sir Henry’s good friend Viscount Enstone and asked for help. The viscount set them up at his hunting lodge, agreed to pay for her brother’s education and even gave them a small allowance. But all that seemed to end when her aunt died and she has written to Viscount Enstone but hasn’t gotten any reply and now with no money, her reputation in tatters and a very unwelcome suitor, she is at her wits end with no one to turn to.

Luke Bamford, the new Viscount Enstone, has inherited a mess, he and his father hadn’t spoke in years as Luke served in the Army. When he got word of his father’s illness, he tried to get back to England in time, but sadly didn’t make it. Now he is trying to sort out the details of the estate. Which has brought him to the hunting lodge and a very angry Miss Davenport. He wants to make things right and decides to take her to London to stay with his Aunt Theo. And much to her relief, he assures her he will honor his father’s commitments and will pay for her brother’s schooling. He is sure his aunt will find her a suitable husband and wonders why that bothers him – since he has no plans to marry.

They get to know each other and Kitty realizes what an honorable man he is and tries to stop herself from developing tender feelings for him, but when they get to London and her nasty suitor follows, Luke protects her by saying they are betrothed. Hope blossoms as Kitty believes they have a love match, a misassumption Luke needs to correct – but before he can, he will have to save her again!

I am not really sure how I feel about this story; the beginning was confusing with so many deaths and frankly a frustrating introduction to the characters. The writing itself wasn’t bad, but I felt like I was sure what the main focus was supposed to be and at the end I still didn’t know. There was a lot going on, which might have been part of the problem for me – there was misunderstandings, A LOT of characters, a marriage of convenience, a missing fortune, a hero who despite several positive examples – refuses to fall in love because of his father’s reaction to losing his wife, kidnapping, warm love scenes and finally a HEA. Overall, I didn’t love this book, I was left with too many questions and am still trying to sort out the timeline of events, but I would consider reading more by this author in the future. This is the second book in the series, but I believe they are loosely connected and can be read as standalone titles.

I am voluntarily leaving a review for an eARC that I requested and was provided to me for a blog tour review.