A Rogue in the Making by Stacy Reid

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A Rogue in the Making by Stacy Reid
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Miss Juliana Pryce is on the run from her dastardly stepfather, who wants to control her wealth by marrying her off to his son! Knowing that she only has to escape their clutches for a few weeks until she comes of age, Juliana resolves to hide. The perfect place seemed to be in the household of Wentworth, the Earl of Rawlings!

Wentworth’s nose is always buried in a book, and despite meddling suggestions from his mother, he has little care for a lady’s companionship or matters of the heart. Until one day, he notices that stunningly lush derriere of his new valet! His suspicion stirs by his valet’s boldness and unconventional behavior, Wentworth resolves to an experiment: Find out if his valet is a woman.

Wentworth embarks on a campaign of roguish behavior! What will the scholarly earl do when the lush derriere, plump lips, and sensual smile he is so singularly attracted to are that of a lady’s?

  • File Name:a-rogue-in-the-making-by-stacy-reid.epub
  • Original Title:A Rogue in the Making (Forever Yours Book 11)
  • Creator:
  • Language:en
  • Identifier:MOBI-ASIN:B086L26STW
  • Publisher:Darkan Press Inc.
  • Date:2020-10-15T16:00:00+00:00
  • File Size:491.681 KB

Table of Content

  • 1. Title Page
  • 2. Copyright
  • 3. Dedication
  • 4. Free Offer
  • 5. Contents
  • 6. Praise for novels of Stacy Reid
  • 7. Other books by Stacy
  • 8. Chapter 1
  • 9. Chapter 2
  • 10. Chapter 3
  • 11. Chapter 4
  • 12. Chapter 5
  • 13. Chapter 6
  • 14. Chapter 7
  • 15. Chapter 8
  • 16. Chapter 9
  • 17. Afterword
  • 18. Chapter 10
  • 19. Chapter 11
  • 20. Chapter 12
  • 21. Chapter 13
  • 22. Free Offer
  • 23. Acknowledgments
  • 24. About Stacy

1 comments
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Kiley O
Kiley O

A Rogue in the Making, Book 11 of the Forever Yours series, was about heiress Miss Juliana Pryce, AKA Mr. Julian Pryce, and Lord Wentworth A. Nelson, the Earl of Rawlings. Side Note: The name of Juliana's stepbrother changed frequently from Matthew to Michael at the beginning of the story. Also, though this book took place after "Sins of Viscount Worsley", that particular man did not seem to be married in this book, though he was in the book just before this one, "Mischief and Mistletoe"...just to note a bit of inconsistency in the story). Barely escaping a forced marriage to her stepbrother, Juliana ran to one of the men her brother said she could safely turn to if she ever needed assistance. When that man betrayed her confidences, she once again ran, only to turn up at the Earl of Rawlings' home, another man her brother trusted would be willing to offer aid should she need it. Before she was able to get a word out, the housekeeper informed her all positions that had been available for hire were taken except that of valet, Juliana devised a plan to transform herself into a man in order to go into hiding until such a time as her brother would return from America and safe her from her dastardly stepfather and stepbrother. As a man of science, Wentworth was often found with his nose buried in one tome or another, working out some hypothesis or mathematical equation. However, he had recently found himself quite unnervingly distracted by the very shapely and lush derriere...of his valet?! Unconscionable! He had never found himself to be attracted to any male before! The more time Wentworth spent in the company of his valet, the more attracted he became until he invited him to share a meal together...and his valet imbibed a little too much wine and made a statement that caught his attention and gave away the ruse. When he decided to perform experiments to determine if his valet was, in fact, a woman, he knew he would also have to do about it, and why she felt the need to disguise herself. The book, while well-written, had a surprising storyline that was...entrancing. Some might not enjoy such a book, but when a lord is also a bookworm and scientific man it tends to take on a whole other outlook. There was a good deal of angst and drama in the book, but there was also a lot of humor as well. The characters were well-developed and once again had a maturity and integrity sorely lacking in such stories. Who would have thought that a scholarly lord and a rambunctious American heiress could have made such a spectacular Hero and Heroine? This book definitely earned a five-star rating and a place with the Keeper for the Shelves collection.

Reply2 years ago