One Good Gentleman by Summer Hanford
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Her virtue or her dreams . . . which must she abandon?
Emilia Glasbarr doesn’t want to be a country miss with a yard full of geese and a scant handful of neighbors. She wants the music, theatre and art found in Scotland’s capital city. She’s sunk her every resource into finishing school to find a city-dwelling husband. Unfortunately, the only man interested wants her for a far less savory purpose.
- File Name:one-good-gentleman-by-summer-hanford.epub
- Original Title:One Good Gentleman: Rules of Refinement Book One (The Marriage Maker 5)
- Creator:Summer Hanford
- Language:en
- Identifier:MOBI-ASIN:B075XBD37N
- Publisher:Scarsdale Publishing, Ltd
- Date:2017-12-04T16:00:00+00:00
- File Size:236.969 KB
Table of Content
- 1. Chapter One
- 2. Chapter Two
- 3. Chapter Three
- 4. Chapter Four
- 5. Chapter Five
- 6. Chapter Six
- 7. Chapter Seven
- 8. Chapter Eight
- 9. Chapter Nine
- 10. Chapter Ten
- 11. Chapter Eleven
- 12. Epilogue
- 13. Chapter One
- 14. Chapter Two
Summer Hanford
Book author Summer Hanford3fans
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The prologue of this book started out with a very boring monologue description of the school for young ladies and the woman who owned it. That, in and of itself, was enough to make the reader want to set it aside and never pick it back up. And it just kept getting worse. So many hateful, cruel characters in this book made it almost unbearable to read. One wonders how, when an author creates characters for books who were so easily misled by crafty, wicked villains/villainesses to believe lies and rumors about others, real people could possibly find that enjoyable to read. The main characters were so poorly written that they didn't even merit being mentioned in the review. With all that said, there was a bit of humor, no real romance, way too much angst, and drama, no time for the main characters to truly build any chemistry...all in all it was a romance novella that wasn't a bit romantic at all. There were two questions that continued to be asked as was the case from the first four: who exactly was Sir Sterling James, and why did he feel the need to play "marriage maker"? Having asked those questions, again, this book did not merit the time wasted on reading it, nor did it even remotely come near to qualifying for a Keeper for the Shelves award. No stars are given for this book.