A Selection of the Doubleday Book Club and Rhapsody Book Club Alexander Drummond, the Marquis of Warrick, is no saint. Descended from a long line of rakes, he has vowed to stop dallying with the fairer sex. But now he needs a woman - an extraordinary woman - to tame his wildcat of a daughter. Intelligent, spirited Mary Callahan is the perfect nursemaid for the child, but one look at her bedroom eyes and luscious lips and Alexander is tempted to seduce one last woman. Available only in Basic 6 & 7.
With over a million books in print, Pamela Britton likes to call herself the best known author nobody’s ever heard of. Of course, that’s begun to change thanks to a certain licensing agreement with that little racing organization known as NASCAR.
Nowadays it’s not unusual to hear her books being discussed by the likes of Jay Leno, Keith Olbermann, or Stephen Colbert. Flip open a magazine and you might read about her, too, in Sports Illustrated, Entertainment Weekly, or Southwest Airlines’ Spirit Magazine. Channel surf and you might see her on CNN, ESPN, ABC or NBC.
But before the glitz and glamour of NASCAR, Pamela wrote books that were frequently voted the best of the best by The Detroit Free Press, Barnes & Noble (two years in a row) and RT BOOKclub Magazine. She’s won numerous writing awards, including the National Reader’s Choice Award, and a nomination for Romance Writers of America’s Golden Heart and the Holt Medallion.
When not following the race circuit, Pamela writes full-time from her ranch in Northern California where she lives with her husband, daughter and, at last count, twenty-one four-legged friends.
If you'd like to chat with Pamela you can find her on her myspace where she loves to hangout with her readers.
The h is a circus rider called by her smuggler dad to dupe the H who's arresting his crew. She's to act as his nanny and provide updates to her Father on where the H plans to hit next. She's determined to do no such thing and decides to basically fail the interview,only she's tempted by the money and so agrees. The H comes from a long line of no good men, he's spent his whole life trying to be the opposite of his ancestors including his father. He needs a nanny for his daughter however and when he realizes she's in danger both his daughter and her tempting new nanny will have to accompany him on his travels.
********* I read this author years ago and liked her work......apparently not anymore
This guy was a HUGE asshole with a gigantic stick up his ass. What I found funny was he was so sanctimonious but he had a child out of wedlock!!!!! What does that say about his supposed "good" character. I hated him and he didn't deserve the h The h started off pretty good, she was sassy and funny but her woe is me this guy is rich and won't want me attitude started to wear on me. In the end she forgave him way too easily. It's been days and just writing this review brought all my annoyance back The end
I think we should bring back saying “I want to bed them”
While not prize worthy high brow literature I found myself burying my face in the pages no less than five times. Zany and sweet and exactly what I wanted it to be.
J'ai tout simplement adoré les personnages. L'entrée en matière était particulièrement savoureuse. Ce livre est rempli d'humour et quelques situations cocasses me font toujours rire aux éclats. L'histoire est bien construite. Le tout est mené avec brio.
I would just like to remind anyone reading this that this review really do have some spoilers so if you're the type to hate spoilers, better not continue okay? Okay.
OVERALL: Regardless of my seemingly long list of grievances towards Alex (and the book), it was surprisingly good. Mary touched a part of me, that I'm willing to give this one a high rating. I couldn't deny though that some ideas where underdeveloped (like the nurse-child scenario and the smuggler-kidnapping one), but the way those two resolved their attraction for each other was very good. The banter between them was also amusing, so plus points.
And that's it. I would recommend it because of simply one thing: I like it, and wish for you to like it too. It's a long way from the usual regency romances out there (a commoner with no social grace at all and a stuffy duke with no inclination to rakishness), but go ahead and give it a try.
🤣Romcom🤣 This book was so funny and I totally laughed out loud many times (don't often do) even my husband inquired what I laughed at. Older style but sooo intertaining. If it weren't for work I probably would have finished this in a day or two. Definitely a must read for Adults. Romcom little 🔥 forbidden love (He's royalty with a child, she's poor) Outspoken women (Time women were proper) I very much recommend and normally don't do romance
This is definitely a fairy tale. I do not think during this period that an heir to a dukedom and the daughter of a smuggler would ever make a match. I can't even imagine the 'nurse' for the daughter would ever think to talk to her employer in this manner. There is a connected book "Scandal". I will read it to see what crazy thing happens in Rein's story.
An enjoyable read, but one that will probably not linger in the memory.
A famous bareback circus rider is persuaded by her father to apply for the post of governess to the revoltingly ill-mannered daughter of the customs official who is coming close to shutting down the father's smuggling operations.
Mary, the smuggler's daughter, reluctantly accepts the position and so begins her life with Alex, the customs official. A romance develops between the stiff, upright Alex and the foul-mouthed, world-savvy Mary. Knowing that their differing social status precludes a marriage, and unwilling to demean herself by becoming Alex's kept woman, Mary calls off the relationship. Not to worry, all works out in the end with Prinny, star of stage, screen and hundreds of historical romance novels, giving the match his blessing. Huzzah!
There's nothing wrong with the story or its development, but I found almost all the characters unsympathetic or two-dimensional. Ms Britton uses enough shows and tells to give insights into these characters, but somehow they don't work. As the leading romantic character, Alex comes across as wimpish and indecisive. His cousin Rein is nauseatingly obnoxious right up to the ending, where he suddenly reveals a flash of near-humanity (a hook for another book in the series, surely). Alex's daughter Gabby is so annoying that she degrades almost every scene in which she appears. And so on and so forth.
Great book! It's funny and the characters leap off the page. I really liked that the heroine was not a gently-bred noblewoman, and in fact had had a fairly rough life. Thankfully the author didn't bog the reader down with too much depressing back story. I wanted to know more, but I know it would have made the lighter, funnier parts less so. I will definitely be reading more by this author, particularly if it involves the cousin, Rein.
*possible spoilers* I only wish that the relationship between the heroine and the child had been shown more on the page. Not chapters worth, just a few more lines. I think that the author missed an opportunity to play with their characters a bit more. After all, the heroine is hired to be a nurse, but spends what feels like half the book away from the child, so the scenes where both are together should be more dynamic, like the opening one. Instead the child is hiding or asleep, leaving the heroine to spend all of her time talking to the father. Nurse and child have a moving interaction close to the end, but I didn't see enough of the development of their relationship, so it felt like a bit of a leap.
Everything else was perfect, and even with my nit-pickiness, I wish I could write as well.
Alexander Drummond, the eighth heir to the Wainridge dukedom, is the first in his lineage to prefer chasing miscreants to maids. An upright Customs Board official, Alex has a knack for outfoxing smugglers, but he doesn't suspect that the newest addition to his household, the spirited, straight-speaking alleged young widow Mary Callahan, is both the daughter of a vengeance-minded smuggler and the Royal Circus's famed female stunt rider Artemis.
The mayhem that ensues after the uncommon commoner is hired as nursemaid for Alex's difficult daughter encompasses kidnapping, daring escapes, several magical scenes of Cockney-to-courtly transformation, crucial cameo appearances by the Prince Regent (later George IV) and, eventually, some spectacular yet sensitively portrayed sex scenes. Britton's (Seduced, etc.) unusual characterizations, command of upper- and lower-class dialects and delightful sense of humor make this Regency-era romp much more than just great winter cruise reading. This is the kind of book that romance fans will read and reread on gloomy days.
I really enjoyed this book. I got a kick out of Mary giving Alex a hard time and shocking him from time to time. I wasn't sure I was going to like the ending but it came out okay. I wish it had been a little more detailed (the ending, I mean) but it was okay.
The main female protagonist, Mary, is a bit of an inconsistant & unlikeable character (foul mouthed virgin). That said I enjoyed the book; something a bit different.
This book was filled with humor and lots of swearing but it was so very much enjoyable. The main characters were fun and interesting to follow about, and the daughter certainly had personality.