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, by Eloisa James

, by Eloisa James


, by Eloisa James


Get Free Ebook , by Eloisa James

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, by Eloisa James

Product details

File Size: 1349 KB

Print Length: 384 pages

Publisher: Avon (May 29, 2018)

Publication Date: May 29, 2018

Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers

Language: English

ASIN: B074DTG8JR

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#2,949 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

Okay, I'll admit that I probably should stop reviewing (actually, stop 'reading') Eloisa James. Everything she writes lately is a 3- or 2-star book for me. It's a nostalgia thing partly. I miss the earlier, cleverer James. Now her books seem to be written for 20-something readers. Hah! I barely remember my 20s. So perhaps I should just shut up and leave the enjoyment of these new stories to the young'uns. But, no, not just yet. I read this one. I'm reviewing it.This is the second in James's new Wilde series. Heaven knows how many there will be because the patriarch duke, now on his third wife (figuratively and literally b/c they keep having babies), has numerous progeny. And the older of his children are adults with friends, so the sky's the limit on how many books could be written.In Book One, about third son Alaric, we learned about the earlier death of first son Horatius, lost in the treacherous bog on the estate. This put second son Roland, aka North, into position as heir to the duchy. At the moment of the first book, his betrothal to Diana was in the works. But things didn't go as planned. She ran off from the engagement party and disappeared. The book ends with a teaser that has us (and North) thinking she had had an out-of-wedlock child prior to meeting North.Well, this book clears up all that and gives North a chance to reboot his courtship of Diana, which had been tone-deaf previously. For example, North had actually fallen, "coup de foudre", for Diana from afar at seeing her and hearing her laugh. To woo her he makes himself into something he's not and doesn't show her his true feelings. Bad move on his part but he gets a chance for a do-over now that he's back from his 2-year stint as a British soldier in the American Revolution.And Diana also gets to show North her true self, which she had felt compelled previously to keep hidden away. So it all sounds simple, doesn't it? Well, it should be, except for dithery, dithering Diana. Sorry, but I wasn't excessively fond of her or her actions throughout this and the previous book. Nor was the story here very interesting.This started out rather well. I enjoyed seeing Diana and North reacquainting themselves and their relationship reboot. North is an appealing character, trying to find himself, cope with PTSD from the war, and convince Diana to marry him. There are several touching and romantic moments.But the story quickly becomes tedious. Too much about children, peacocks, and family members. Yes, Godfrey (the little boy believed to be Diana's love child) and Artemesia (North's youngest half-sister) are adorable, but, really, I wasn't interested in reading so very much about them. Give me a really good love story, not a rambling story that, for me, had little cohesion. For example, that barmaid scene towards the end. Oh, please. Ridiculous. A showcase of why I did not like Diana.Well, North loves her. There's an HEA. He deserves it. She lucked into it.

E J (one of my favorites) speculated that perhaps she shud stop writing recency novels. Yes, please at least take break until you can come up with a story line. The last two books have been very disappointing. In lieu of a substantial storyline the reader gets pages of dithering or sex. I started skimming about 1\4 thru. Sorry, I'm done.

Not what I expect from James. Tale of lovers who are hindered by serious issues, madcap misunderstandings, and odd ridiculousness (sans humour). Most of story was quintessential James, then it began to veer wildly between madcap humor and completely ludicrous elements. What happened? Hope this novel was an oddly ridiculous aberration. 2.5 stars

A cruel, devious, inversely snobbish yet entirely hypocritical slattern of a h. A bizarrely much maligned muddle of a H, whose greatest crime is being in love with the h, while she’s in love with pudding. No joke. At 80% of the way through this jumbled mess of a non-romance, the h is contemplating hooking up with a stranger. Then, a rush to the end, with various character threads abandoned and unresolved for the most vacuous of endings. Incredibly unsatisfactory.I’m cancelling my pre-order of the next title in this series; to drop a Shakespeare reference a la Ms James, this one stank too much to continue wasting my money or time after such an awful book.

North Wilde is the heir to the dukedom. He was jilted in the first book of the series and found his ex-fiancee Diana in a small cottage with a baby not his, so he leaves to fight in America.Now he's returned and finds Diana working as a nursery maid at his father's estate. He's still in love with her but finds her much changed from the powdered and pampered woman he was engaged to. Diana also is much struck by the changes in North; in order to win her, he had been equally fashionable which is not his real character and now he's acting as his real self.I love North but I have a lot of trouble with Diana. Her behavior here is often ridiculous and her insistence on not wanting to be a Duchess becomes tiresome. I also found the ending pretty trite, wrapped up in a way that didn't make much sense for a ducal family.I do like the Wildes family with the numerous and varied progeny from the Duke's three wives though I suspect the next book is going to be about Diana's cousin and the adopted son which I suspect is one I may skip.

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