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Celia's Grand Passion and Lucy in Disguise

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Together for the First Time in One Volume,
the stories of an irresistible pair of brothers and the two equally captivating women who fall under their spell!

Celia's Grand Passion

No man in England can match Lord Kendal's cool elegance or rival his peerless diplomatic skills. His icy calm is as notorious as his untouchable heart. Undaunted, Lady Celia Greer, an exuberant young widow, vows to melt his frosty demeanor. If ever there has been a gentleman worth saving from his own cold prison, it is Kendal. And if ever there has been a woman for the job, it is she.

Lucy in Disguise

Miss Lucy Preston rues the day she rescued a wounded smuggler from the quicksand of a Lancashire beach. For Christopher Valliant, an infuriatingly curious rascal, quickly discovers that she is helping a frightened young lady running from danger. What's more, despite Lucy's stubborn opposition, he's determined to help the fair damsels - motivated by nothing less than pure, glorious love....

213 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published April 5, 2005

18 people want to read

About the author

Lynn Kerstan

30 books18 followers
Lynn Kerstan is a former college professor, folksinger, professional bridge player, and nun.

Her first book, A Spirited Affair, published in 1993, was a double RITA finalist. In 1996, she took home a prestigious RITA Award for Gwen's Christmas Ghost, written with Indianapolis resident Alicia Rasley via E-Mail. A pioneer of on-line collaboration, she had previously collaborated with Rasley and Julie Caille on Lessons in Love, the world's first Electronic Regency Romance.

A four-time RITA finalist and regularly featured on awards lists, Kerstan has won the CRW Award of Excellence, the Golden Quill Award, two San Diego Book Awards, two Romance Communications Awards, and been a finalist for the National Readers' Choice Award, several Romantic Times awards, and the Holt Medallion.

Kerstan lives in Southern California, where she plots her books while riding her boogie board and does character research at the San Diego Zoo.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Aneca.
958 reviews124 followers
January 4, 2011
CELIA'S GRAND PASSION
I've put Kerstan on my WL after reading Lord Dragoner's Wife, that was a MOC story between a titled gentleman and a cit's daughter and I greatly enjoyed it. Celia's Grand Passion is completely different but it was also a nice story.


It starts in a surprising way with a lady of the ton hiding in a closet to spy on the gentleman of her dreams. Naturally she couldn't be an ordinary lady and Celia does have a strange story behind that we get to know as the action progresses. The lover of her dreams is Lord Kendall and he ends up catching her spying on him.


When they meet again at a society ball Kendall seems as interested in Celia as she is in him. Since they are both free, she is a widow and he a widower, the eventually decide to engage in a love affair. But everything goes wrong when Kendall discover something about Celia's past, something that makes him distrust her as he did his wife and that left him scarred about trusting people.


I did like Celia's quiet dignity; she knew she was not in the wrong and that men are often only interested in their own pleasures so she actually bests him and makes him feel the worse about his attitude. They separate, determined not to see watch other again but fate brings them together when Celia meets Kendall's son and brother in the country and he eventually comes home.


I did like them more the better I knew them and although Kendall's past wasn't that original I thought Celia's story was a bit different from the ordinary. For a while I thought it would be difficult for those two to find their way to happiness because they kept bickering and fighting each other but in the end I am glad they found a way to make up and confess their feelings.


Grade: 4/5



LUCY IN DISGUISE
I recently read Kerstan's Celia's Grand Passion and since this story is about the hero's brother I couldn't resist picking it up next. It has an original plot that resembles that of a gothic story but this one is humourous novel so the resemblance stops there.


Christopher Valliant is saved by a lady masquerading as a lad one night when he is about to drown after having fell under a cart on the beach, during a smuggling operation. He is taken to her house to recover and he realises that there are in fact two ladies, one of whom is always hiding.


Lucy, the supposed lad, is a rather determined young Lady. She does her best to protect her friend Diana, who has been hurt by her uncle and is hiding from an unwanted suitor, and her efforts go as far as to pretend she is the ghost of an old witch to prevent people to approach their cottage. Christopher can't help but admiring her character and eventually he manages to hear the hole story from Diana and is determined to help them loose the evil guardian.


I'm afraid I did not like this story half as much as the other Kerstan book I had read. It may be that part of my problem was that I don't always like funny regencies (unless we are talking about Heyer); I always love best the ones that are dark, poignant and a bit tragic. But most of it was that I thought Christopher and Lucy had no chemistry together. I had a hard time believing they had fallen in love and made it a bit of a chore to finish it. I was glad to see Celia and her husband again though and I ended up a bit curious about Diana so I might try to track her book down one of these days.


Grade: 3/5
Profile Image for QNPoohBear.
3,594 reviews1,567 followers
February 8, 2014
Lady Celia Greer, recently widowed is determined to cut a dash in London for the first time in her life. Her plans include taking a lover, and not just any lover, but the handsome widower, James Valliant, Early of Kendal, who has been the object of her fantasies for many years. Lord Kendal's first meeting with Celia is awkward and embarrassing and she asks him to forget it ever happened. He believes that will be an easy task, however, forgetting Celia is not easy. Celia's moment of Grand Passion is thwarted by a misunderstanding and masculine pride and James runs back to the Continent and Celia back to the country to settle her late husband's estate. In the country, Celia makes the acquaintance of Christopher "Kit" Valliant and a charming little boy, Charley, Lord Paxton. Celia soon falls in love with the emotionally starved boy and the boy with her until James returns to find Celia has interfered with his strict regimen he has planned for his son. Celia discovers Valliant family secrets and tries to set things right, regardless of her interest in Lord Kendal. James can't help being drawn to the charming, outspoken young woman, yet their past and his pride could prevent Celia from experiencing the passion she's long dreamed of. This story has all the trappings of a Lifetime movie. It is incredibly cliched, and if I had known that the hero was a widower, I could have predicted the plot without even reading the book. Celia is a great character and I admire her for her actions and recognizing her desires, however, I hate James and don't understand why Celia loves him. Attraction/desire is not the same as love. I prefer stories where there's courtship and romance. The story has more depth than most novels with the same plot and it may bring the sentimental types to tears. I would recommend this book if you prefer the spice and melodrama of Regency Historicals.
Profile Image for Lynne Tull.
1,465 reviews51 followers
January 6, 2011
Two books in one...reads like one. Celia's Grand Passion is James Valliant, the Earl of Kendal and Lucy in Disguise is the woman his brother, Christopher "Kit", loves. These are the first books I have read by Lynn Kerstan. I like her writing style and her stories. I liked the James/Celia story more than the Lucy/Kit story. The former was more realist; the latter was an adventure/fantasy tale. There is something to be said for both. The only thing that always stands out in Period novels is when a modern expression is woven into the dialog. The one that always sets my teeth on edge is "thank you" as in "thank you, very much". ie, I'll do as I please, thank you very much. I can just hear someone say that today in conversation. I cannot imagine in the Regency Period.
Profile Image for Ilze.
763 reviews64 followers
February 12, 2013
Celia's Grand Passion - 4 stars - nice angsty "traditional Regency". Lucy in Disguise - 3 stars - cute story but it didn't engage me somehow.

2 out of 3 books I've read so far of Lynn Kerstan's are 4-star keepers - will be keeping an eye out for her books in the UBS in future - I don't think any of hers are still in print.
77 reviews
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April 11, 2010
Celia's Grand Passion and Lucy in Disguise (Signet Regency Romance) by Lynn Kerstan (2005)
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