Set in late 1800s, Thane gets word from a solicitor in England that his older brother (Henry) died and he must travel there to settle the estate. So he travels from his ranch in Oregon across the states and then across the Atlantic, which, for someone easily prone to seasickness, is utterly miserable. (In fact it starts out with him wanting to kiss the ground upon arrival in England.)
After the trip to Liverpool and meeting the lawyer in charge of Henry's holdings, they drive a conveyance to his brother's property a few hours away. There he gets a huge surprise. His brother left everything to him and this included Henry's now orphaned children he knew nothing about, and Henry's sister-in-law who has been with them since she was a teenager
His trial is to figure out what to do. Staying there was out of the question, but traveling with them back to Oregon meant Thane had to marry the sister-in-law to safeguard her reputation. This would be a marriage on paper only, no marital "expectations".
The rest of the book (really only half the book, because it took more than 50% to get to Thane's Oregon ranch) was the British born family acclimating to an arid, fairly rugged lifestyle, in a cabin, coming from their rather large home in England's countryside with servants.
The 2-star rating was for several reasons....
1) The premise is all about the marriage of two entirely different people, who clearly didn't even like each other. There would have been no story if Thane had done the logical thing...hire the butler and cook that lived with the family to travel to America with them...or at least hire another couple. He was, after all, rich.
2) An editor missed at least seven typos, but that's really quite minor compared to many books I've read with dozens of errors.
3) This was another book that dealt with attraction by looks only... how the female appeared in her dresses, the swish of her skirts, and her beautiful face. For the male lead it was about his broad shoulders, slim waist and handsome features. The bare chest, or less-clad appearance upon occasion was, of course, something to cause weak knees as well. All this (and in nearly every chapter) while they can't stand each other. Nothing but biting remarks and criticism. It was awful.
4) Jemma was not to be believed. For a gentile woman, bred and raised in a more noble class (Lady Jemma was her title), she was caustic, rude and nasty, and never said a nice thing about Thane, who was far more patient with her than she was of him. She even likened him to a horses hind end on one occasion. Plus she got angry at everything!
So, even though it ended well, it took all the way to the last 10th of the book for her to see Thane for the nice (albeit teasing) person he was, and for her to act like a normal human being.
The whole book would have been so much better if the author had just toned down Jemma's ridiculous attitude....AND made them develop a friendship rather than constant lusty thoughts about the looks and physique of the other person. It was just over the top. Maybe I'm just weird, but I never felt anything LIKE lust or even attraction towards someone I couldn't stand to even be around.
If you can overlook the caustic remarks, and overlook the stupid desire to kiss the person they are nasty toward, then you might just enjoy the book.