There are 2 Balogh regencies here and that caused me no end of trouble in trying to come up with a star rating for the whole book. THE TEMPORARY WIFE (from 1997) is almost a 5-star Balogh but A PROMISE OF SPRING (from 1990) was just too tedious and exasperating for me and, written by any other author, would deserve a 2-star rating.
Both are presented in the same volume because, I assume, they are both about marriages of convenience. No characters overlap from one to the other as in her previous 2-for-1 releases. (However, be on the lookout for characters in A PROMISE OF SPRING that show up in Balogh's WEB series.)
THE TEMPORARY WIFE is lovely and Kleenex-worthy. Lord Anthony Earheart has been estranged from his family for 8 years and wishes to annoy his tyrannical father by marrying beneath himself, so he advertises for a governess, intending to marry the first shabby genteel applicant of marriageable age who will agree to such a marriage. What's in it for the woman? A house of her own, with servants to take care of it, and several thousand pounds annual income.
Charity Duncan answers the ad because her family of siblings (parents deceased) is in dire need of funds. She's so desperate that she accepts the marriage proposal. So Anthony marries Charity and takes her to visit his dysfunctional family . (Did I mention that his father is a duke and that he is the heir? Well, he forgot to mention that to Charity at first also.) And we're off to a great read. Watch Charity work her magic not just on Anthony but on the whole family. A lovely story.
Then comes A PROMISE OF SPRING. You may need Kleenex for this one also but I was too exasperated by the H and h to feel the pathos attempts by Balogh. Heroine Grace Howard is 35 and living with her brother Paul, the village rector. He dies at the beginning of the story and Grace is seemingly alone in the world. Hero Sir Peregrine Lampman, 10 years her junior, had been a good friend of Paul's and proposes marriage to Grace to rescue her from certain poverty and loneliness. It's unclear why he has to do this. It seems like finding her a good job as housekeeper or lady's companion should have been enough, especially since neither one was attracted romantically to the other.
And there's my biggest problem with this whole story. I didn't feel the attraction at any moment in the story, not even at the end when they are professing their love. The romance is pretty blah and the heroine Grace is even blah-er. Yes, she has a tragic secret in her past but she was such a washed-out personality that I couldn't much like her, especially since every 2 seconds or so she agonizes over the 10-year age difference between herself and Perry. That got pretty old pretty fast.
And Perry? He's a nice guy, but perhaps too nice and too conflict-avoiding. I couldn't quite make out his personality and also found him to laugh and smile overmuch and never say what he was thinking or feeling. Grace and Perry never really talk to each other about much except the growing of flowers. It became unbearably frustrating for me. All their issues could have been resolved in half the time with some good heart-to-hearts.
Well, this is just my opinion of the second story. I'm sure there will be many other readers who like it very much. On the upside for me, it was worth buying the whole book just to read THE TEMPORARY WIFE.