Tammy K. (tk942) - , reviewed on + 41 more book reviews
Overall, The Earl and the Heiress is a light quick romance that amuses, and is worth the read.
I found Noelle to be a bit at odds with herself. One moment she's barging into Justin's house and telling him off and the next she's perfectly happy to do whatever he thinks is best.
From the inside jacket:
Noelle Armstrong never expected that she and her younger sister and brother, beautiful Ferne and young Winston, Viscount Sterling, would have the means to go to London for even one Season. But when Great-aunt Sylvia, an ancient, curmudgeonly lady, leaves her house and a modest inheritance to Noelle, that chance becomes a reality. Now, perhaps, an advantageous match can be made for Ferne - and possibly even Winston.
With their widowed Aunt Hattie, the Armstrongs take up residence in Aunt Sylvia's London home. But with no connections in the proper places, how are they to go about being accepted by the ton? Ingenious Nelly is undaunted. First, she engages the services and below stairs connections of Taylor, the former servant of their dead man-of-the-world father. And then, one morning, an advertisement appears in the London Gazette:
Loyal, intelligent, clean white dogs of the Maltese breed. Inquiries No. 4 Chauncey Square. Five only, one hundred pounds each.
The next day, the little dogs themselves make their public debut.
As Noelle has planned, the curiosity roused by the notice and the sight of the small pets brings the ton to their door - most particularly, one Justin, Earl of Wrenthe, who buys one of the puppies for his mistress - but soon replaces it with a farewell necklace and transfers the dog to his dowager mother. In the process, he and Noelle figuratively but intensely cross swords; Noelle on behalf of feckless Ferne, who has inadvertently gotten involved in a minor scandal which her sister blames on the earl; Wrenthe because he has never been challenged by a young lady he finds disturbingly attractive.
In this charming and unusual romance, whose characters - including the bouncy Maltese puppies - cannot fail to engage the reader, the author has provided another sparkling novel of Regency times.
I found Noelle to be a bit at odds with herself. One moment she's barging into Justin's house and telling him off and the next she's perfectly happy to do whatever he thinks is best.
From the inside jacket:
Noelle Armstrong never expected that she and her younger sister and brother, beautiful Ferne and young Winston, Viscount Sterling, would have the means to go to London for even one Season. But when Great-aunt Sylvia, an ancient, curmudgeonly lady, leaves her house and a modest inheritance to Noelle, that chance becomes a reality. Now, perhaps, an advantageous match can be made for Ferne - and possibly even Winston.
With their widowed Aunt Hattie, the Armstrongs take up residence in Aunt Sylvia's London home. But with no connections in the proper places, how are they to go about being accepted by the ton? Ingenious Nelly is undaunted. First, she engages the services and below stairs connections of Taylor, the former servant of their dead man-of-the-world father. And then, one morning, an advertisement appears in the London Gazette:
Loyal, intelligent, clean white dogs of the Maltese breed. Inquiries No. 4 Chauncey Square. Five only, one hundred pounds each.
The next day, the little dogs themselves make their public debut.
As Noelle has planned, the curiosity roused by the notice and the sight of the small pets brings the ton to their door - most particularly, one Justin, Earl of Wrenthe, who buys one of the puppies for his mistress - but soon replaces it with a farewell necklace and transfers the dog to his dowager mother. In the process, he and Noelle figuratively but intensely cross swords; Noelle on behalf of feckless Ferne, who has inadvertently gotten involved in a minor scandal which her sister blames on the earl; Wrenthe because he has never been challenged by a young lady he finds disturbingly attractive.
In this charming and unusual romance, whose characters - including the bouncy Maltese puppies - cannot fail to engage the reader, the author has provided another sparkling novel of Regency times.