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Rise of an Eagle

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Morgan was raised in Ty’s shadow.

Morgan Hart lard had inherited enough of her grandfather's estate in the Australian Outback to make her a rich woman. But Ty Hartland, her natural-born rival, had the controlling interest.

Morgan had always resented Ty’s position, and his arrogant indifference. Now their mutual inheritance made their lives inseparable.

So when Ty unleashed his desire for Morgan, she was wildly confused, unable to reconcile it with her past. Just when had their rivalry become a passion—too intense to resist?

189 pages, Paperback

First published January 13, 1989

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About the author

Margaret Way

617 books165 followers
Margaret Way was born and educated in the river city of Brisbane, Australia. Before her marriage she was a well-known pianist, teacher, vocal coach and accompanist, but her hectic musical career came to a halt when her son was born and the demands of motherhood dictated a change of pace.

On a fortuitous impulse she decided to try her hand at romance writing and was thrilled when Mills & Boon accepted her first effort, Time of the Jacaranda, which they published less than a year later in 1970; a feat that brought tears to her father's eyes. Some seventy odd books have followed resulting in a loyal readership whose letters provide a source of support and encouragement. A driving force in all her writing has been the promotion of her much loved country, Australia. She delights in bringing it alive for her readers; its people, way of life, environment, flora and fauna. Her efforts so far have not excited official recognition, but she expects one day she will be awarded the "Order of Australia."

Her interests remain with the arts. She still plays the piano seriously, but her "top Cs" have gone. She is still addicted to collecting antiques and paintings and browsing through galleries. She now lives within sight and sound of beautiful Moreton Bay and its islands, inspiration for some of her books. Her house is full of books, spectacular plants, Chinese screens and pots. She is devoted to her garden and spends much time "directing the design and digging and providing cold drinks and chocolates."

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5 stars
3 (6%)
4 stars
11 (25%)
3 stars
18 (40%)
2 stars
6 (13%)
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6 (13%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Naksed.
2,302 reviews7 followers
June 8, 2017
Rise of an eagle???!!! The whole book is about the heroine being browbeaten by the hero, his relatives, and her own family, friends and employees into accepting that her role as a woman should be confined to feminine pursuits in the kitchen, planning parties, or redecorating ye olde homestead, while real men take charge of men stuff i.e. running the cattle station, making the business deals, giving orders, etc.

Now, personally, I don't have any problem with traditional gender roles, in fiction or in real life, as long as that's what both parties want and it makes them happy. But I was really sickened here by the fact that she didn't want that, she had all the education and personal attributes to become a first rate ranch woman, but chip by chip, the people around her destroyed her self-esteem and drive until she literally gave up.

At the end, we are left with a marriage of convenience with a VERY DUBIOUS commitment by the hero, who seems to have no problem whatsoever sampling the lady buffet (at one point, he has three women in nightgowns stalking him at night and he takes it all as a bit of a joke). His first love is his career, his second responsibility is his beloved mom and sisters, and the heroine comes in probably between mistress number 6 and 7, and only because she has some shares in the family business and will presumably birth the heir and the spare.

Barf!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for StMargarets.
3,241 reviews641 followers
August 3, 2020
I found this fascinating – not as a romance (it hardly exists) – but as a study of the Venus/Mars paradox that was so popular in the 1990’s

The heroine has been raised by her autocratic grandfather to take over all of his outback holdings when he dies. His son is dead and he is semi-estranged from his stepbrother’s family (to which the hero belongs). His idea of training the heroine is to cut her off from her mother, send her to a snobby boarding school where she learns the feminine arts of piano, ballet, interior decorating etc. . On her holidays she’s at the station, playing jackeroo.

Heroine rides well and has passed all the physically exhausting “tests” her grandfather set for her. She thinks she has the respect of the men on the station and that it will be an easy transition for her to take over. Instead, she finds that her grandfather has named the hero as his heir and the heroine has received half the house/mansion and a small percent of the land. She also discovers that the men feared for her safety and resented not being able to protect her. They like her and acknowledge her courage, but they don’t respect her skills – at all.

Heroine is extremely angry at this betrayal by her grandfather and having to completely re-calibrate her life. Her emotions leap off the page. I was fascinated with this very accurate portrayal of impotent rage. Since heroine was raised as a “man,” she doesn’t hide her anger. No one knows what to do with her. Hero’s family sympathizes, offers diversions to Sydney for shopping, etc. . .

The author doesn’t know what to do with her, either. She boxes the heroine into a corner and leaves her there until she changes her mind about wanting to be a hands-on station owner. The world of men (Mars) is too dangerous for her. After a near death experience with an untamed stallion(ha!), the author coaxes her over to the civilized land of Venus. She allows the heroine to explore the beauty of the city and material things. She gives her a project (completely renovating the family mansion) that draws her into the world of women. Of course, these women compete with each other – Venus is full of OWs. But heroine prevails – as all of MWs heroines do. The hero is her prize for channeling her energy away from anger into acceptance.

It’s depressing as hell if the reader was invested in the heroine running her own station.

Since none of the grandfather’s “training” really prepared her for running a business with many moving parts, I wasn’t heartbroken. Hero can have that headache. But I didn’t feel that heroine’s “reward” really fit her personality or made up for all the betrayal in her life. (Her mother was HORRIBLE). The hero’s “love” was certainly not enough of a prize for all of the trials and tribulations heroine went through, either.

While I don’t agree with MW’s resolution for the heroine (I would have packed her off to university so she could learn about business or agriculture or economics or climate change or geology – all useful skills for huge Outback holdings), I do appreciate how she let the heroine express her anger.

But then we’re back to the resolution problems. Heroine’s anger dissipated – it was never resolved. And that anger will probably haunt her later on in life.
Profile Image for Booked.
328 reviews50 followers
July 4, 2012
I like the way that she thinks. The tandem between the two characters is very much alive. He is her cousin of sorts. They grew up competing with each other for the control of their grandfather's land. It's great how their whole family and of course the man himself plots to get them together. The tug of war is on her part, but he just tugs her to him.
Profile Image for RomLibrary.
5,789 reviews
December 18, 2023
Morgan was raised in Ty’s shadow.
Morgan Hart lard had inherited enough of her grandfather's estate in the Australian Outback to make her a rich woman. But Ty Hartland, her natural-born rival, had the controlling interest.

Morgan had always resented Ty’s position, and his arrogant indifference. Now their mutual inheritance made their lives inseparable.

So when Ty unleashed his desire for Morgan, she was wildly confused, unable to reconcile it with her past. Just when had their rivalry become a passion—too intense to resist?
391 reviews
November 10, 2025
They bickered weird. Half of the time I don’t follow. That’s common with Margaret Way btw——imo. Lastly, that premise was pure chaos. A hell of a lot happened, the pace suddenly fell all over the place. I was first distracted then confused by the intensity of his/her actions. Too much madness going on, no chemistry and whacky characters and storytelling, DNF.
Profile Image for Amara.
2,414 reviews80 followers
June 8, 2017
Noooooooo. What was Margaret Way thinking with this one?? It had promise, but I feel like she got off course. Horrid writing, she repeats herself, there's no clear dilemma, and the resolution is.....*snore...
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews