Goddess of the Hunt (Wanton Dairymaid Trilogy)
Goddess of the Hunt (Wanton Dairymaid Trilogy) book cover

Goddess of the Hunt (Wanton Dairymaid Trilogy)

Mass Market Paperback – July 28, 2009

Price
$7.99
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345506863
Dimensions
4.12 x 0.82 x 6.73 inches
Weight
6.4 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. Dare's sparkling Regency romance debut introduces a cunning and instantly likable tomboy heroine. Lucy Waltham has been besotted with her brother's friend Toby since she was 11. Now 19 and determined to get Toby away from ladylike, well-dowried Sophia, Lucy decides to practice seduction techniques on another family friend, Jeremy Trescott, earl of Kendall and 10 years her senior. Their innocent trysts become a sizzling affair that leads abruptly to the altar, after which Lucy must use all her considerable wit and intelligence to transform herself into a countess without ever losing the wild spirit that Jeremy finds both daunting and delightful. Dare seems to have fit all the best of romance into one novel, from sensuous interludes and crafty humor to endearing multidimensional characters. Readers will eagerly anticipate the two sequels due in the fall. (Aug.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. “The sweetest, sexiest romance you’ll read all year.”—Eloisa James“From the time Toby Aldridge had whimsically crowned her Goddess of the Hunt, 11-year-old Lucy Waltham had adored him. Now, eight years later, with Toby intending to propose to someone else, naïve Lucy boldly plans to seduce him but needs practice—and an ally. Who better than her emotionally chilly best friend, Jeremy Trescott, Earl of Kendall, to make Toby jealous? This is an exceptional debut novel, from the first hilarious “practice” session to the gradual melting of Jem’s outward reserve and xadLucy’s maturing realization of whom she really loves. A beautifully crafted tale that captivates with sassy wit, a lush, sweetly intense sensuality, and an abundance of beautifully articulated, appealing characters.”— Library Journal “A daring debut…Dare is on the path to stardom.”— Romantic Times “Debut author Tessa Dare bursts upon the scene with a high-energy and high-drama romance. She tells the story with provocative words and feverish action. Her cast of secondary characters is unforgettable and set the stage for the next book in this back-to-back series.”— Fresh Fiction “Highly original… Tessa Dare is an author to watch!”— Romance Reader’s Connection “I fell in love with Goddess of the Hunt and Tessa Dare from the very first page! Goddess of the Hunt is a romantic delight sure to satisfy every reader." —Teresa Medeiros Tessa Dare is a part-time librarian, full-time mommy, and swing-shift writer. She makes her home in Southern California, where she shares a cozy, cluttered bungalow with her husband, their two children, and a dog. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter OneAutumn, 1817 A knock on the door in the dead of night could only mean disaster.Jeremy pulled a pair of worn breeches on under his nightshirt and stumbled toward the bedchamber door. A fire? He didn’t smell smoke. Perhaps a Waltham family emergency? An urgent message from his steward, maybe—unrest at Corbinsdale would not come as a surprise.A memory assailed him, unbidden. Unnerving. His heart thudded wildly in his chest. He paused, clutching the door handle, cursing his body for recalling so quickly what he’d worked long years to forget.Logic caught up to his racing pulse, reining it in. The dim glow of banked coals cast ominous shadows, but Jeremy forced the room into focus. This was not that night. He was in his usual bedchamber at Waltham Manor, not wandering Corbinsdale Woods. More than twenty years had passed, and he was no longer a boy. Whatever surprise awaited him on the other side of the door, he was fully equipped to face it.When he slid back the rusted bolt and wrenched open the door, Jeremy was prepared for the worst.“Hold still,” came the whispered command.He had an instant to register a feminine silhouette, a tangle of dark curls, and two hands grasping his shoulders. Then Lucy Waltham, the younger sister of his oldest friend, popped up on her toes and pressed her lips to his with such force, he stumbled against the doorjamb.Good Lord. The girl was kissing him.Well, he thought ironically, he’d been prepared for the worst. And of the many kisses Jeremy Trescott had experienced in his nine-and-twenty years, this was, undoubtedly, the worst.Lucy kissed with her lips perfectly puckered and her eyes open wide. And if she lacked in finesse, she compensated with bold enthusiasm. Her hands were everywhere at once—tangling in his hair, skimming his shoulders, exploring the broad expanse of his chest.This wasn’t a kiss. It was a siege.Furthermore, it was incomprehensible, wholly illogical, and a dozen different shades of wrong.Somehow Jeremy’s hands found their way to her elbows, and he wrested himself from her eager embrace. “Lucy! What the devil do you think you’re doing?”“Shhhh.” Her eyes darted to either side, scanning the darkened corridor. Then her gaze tilted back up to his, narrowing with a disturbing intensity, and Jeremy fancied briefly—absurdly—that someone had painted a target on his face.“I’m practicing,” she whispered, her fingers tightening over his arms. “Let me try one more time.”She swooped up for another kiss, and he instinctively ducked, pulling her into the room and shutting the door behind them. In a more rational moment, it might have occurred to him that the impropriety of kissing his host’s sister in the corridor would only be compounded by yanking her into his bedchamber. But Jeremy’s faculties of reason had temporarily vacated Waltham Manor.Lucy had, quite literally, kissed him witless.“Did it work, then?”He stared at her, mute with confusion. Did what work? At the moment, it seemed that nothing worked, least of all his brain. Shock had frozen his limbs. He certainly couldn’t force an answer from his lips.Stepping back, she crossed her arms over her crimson velvet dressing gown and surveyed his form boldly. As her gaze traveled downward, Jeremy grew uncomfortably aware of his own dishabille, from nightshirt to worn breeches to bare feet.A satisfied smile spread across her face. “It must have worked. You did pull me into your bedchamber.” She reached for the door handle. “Very well, Jemmy. I suppose that’s enough practice. I’ll see you at breakfast.”She cracked open the door. Jeremy put out a hand and slammed it shut.Shooting him a glare, she grasped the handle with both hands and tugged. “I beg your pardon. I’ll be on my way, then.”“No, you won’t.” He leaned his weight on the door, effectively bolting it closed. Lucy might be used to flouting her brother’s half-hearted attempts at guardianship, but Jeremy had four inches and two stone on Henry Waltham, not to mention an iron will. Lucy did not walk all over him.He mustered his most autocratic, Earl-of-Kendall tone. “You are not going anywhere. You’re going to sit down and explain yourself.” She opened her mouth to object. He grabbed her by the elbow and steered her toward a chair. “But first,” he said, “I am going to have a drink.”She stopped struggling under his grip and dropped gracelessly into the chair. “A drink,” she repeated. “Why didn’t I think of that? A drink would be just the thing, thank you.”Shaking his head, Jeremy strode to the bar and poured a single glass of whiskey. He downed half the liquor in one greedy swallow, closing his eyes to savor the burn spreading down his throat. When he opened them again, he looked around to assure himself this was, indeed, the same Waltham Manor he’d been visiting each autumn since Cambridge. Roughhewn beams scored the sloping ceiling. Muted tapestries covered the walls, and an unfussy, timeworn carpet obliged his bare feet. The room had not altered in the past eight years, any more than it likely had in the past one hundred.In decor, in landscape, in the quartet of old friends enjoying their annual sporting holiday—Waltham Manor had remained a welcome constant in Jeremy’s life. Until this year, when everything had changed.“Why couldn’t everything just go on as it was?” Lucy stirred the fire with a poker, sending swirls of agitated sparks into the air. “Why did Felix have to go and get married? He’s ruined everything.”Jeremy drowned his reply with a sip of his drink. He would not have admitted it, but he rather agreed.“It was all right when Henry got married,” she continued. “Marianne’s so busy with the children, at least she stays out of the way. But that shrew Felix married is going to expect to be entertained. And to make it all worse, she’s brought along her sister, that Sophia.”“Mrs. Crowley-Cumberbatch and Miss Hathaway are, by all accounts, charming young ladies. One would think you’d be glad of their company.”She threw him an incredulous look.“Or not.” Truth be told, Jeremy wasn’t glad of their presence, either. There was nothing precisely offensive about Felix’s wife, Kitty, or her sister, Sophia. To the contrary, Sophia Hathaway was the epitome of an inoffensive, well-bred society beauty. A bit of meringue— insubstantial, but pleasing enough, if one’s tastes ran to sweet. As Toby’s apparently did.Jeremy tossed back another swallow of whiskey and tasted the irony. Henry and Felix married, Toby on the verge . . . their bachelor’s retreat had become a family house party. Well, if all his friends were determined to shackle themselves in marriage, at least he would be in no imminent danger of joining them. All three ladies at Waltham Manor were safely accounted for.The sound of fingers drumming wood interrupted his thoughts. “Do you intend to drink the whole bottle yourself?”Unless, of course, one counted Lucy.And he did not count Lucy. She was neither eligible nor a lady. She was Henry’s much younger sister and ward, and she was Jeremy’s personal version of a biblical plague. She’d spent years devising ways to get under his skin. Now she was charging into his bedchamber and . . . and practicing.Much as he wished to erase that kiss from his memory, he couldn’t ignore it. Neither could he ignore the obvious implications of that word, “practicing.”He could, however, ignore her request for a drink. Jer?emy refilled his own glass and carried it toward the hearth, dropping into the chair opposite hers. Raking a hand through his hair, he exhaled slowly. “I don’t like to ask this. I dread your response. But for what, exactly, are you practicing?”“Not ‘what,’?” she answered. “Who.”Oh, it only got worse. “For whom are you practicing, then? Some local youth? The vicar’s boy?”“For Toby, of course.”He gave a wry laugh. “For Toby? Why would you be kissing Toby? He’s all but engaged to Miss Hathaway.”She hugged her knees to her chest, curling into a ball of red velvet and chestnut curls. The chair’s masculine proportions dwarfed her, and her green eyes brimmed with raw, undisguised hurt. “Then it’s true.”Bloody hell. Suddenly this bizarre nighttime visit made sense. Jeremy punched the arm of his chair. Of all the irretrievably stupid things to say.“My maid said she heard it from Toby’s valet. I didn’t want to believe her. I couldn’t believe her. But it’s true.”Jeremy had to look away. It was a matter of self-preservation. Lucy’s countenance was a collection of pixie features set within a heart-shaped face—a face designed to display, unfiltered, every emotion of the heart within. One couldn’t look at her without knowing exactly how she was feeling, and Jeremy didn’t wish to know how Lucy was feeling. He preferred to keep a respectful distance from even his own emotions.“How could he?” she squeaked.Jeremy winced. Lucy sniffed loudly, and he took another slow sip of whiskey. She could not cry, he wanted to remind her. That was the rule—Henry’s single exercise in authority. He’d allowed the chit to run rough?shod over them every autumn, tagging along on their hunting and fishing excursions, parroting their curses, even taking nips off their flasks—under one condition. Lucy was not to cry. In eight years, he had never seen her shed a single tear. He prayed she wasn’t about to start now. If there was one thing he couldn’t abide, it was a crying woman.He stole a glance at her. Damn it, her chin was quivering. “You’re not going to start weeping, are you?”“No.” Her voice quivered, too.Jeremy busied himself adding wood to the fire, stall?ing for time.Curse Toby. This was all his fault. He’d always made such a pet of the girl. Every autumn, Lucy clung to Toby like a tick on a hound. He baited her hooks and taught her bawdy Latin conjugations. He brought her flowers and wove her crowns of ivy that went straight to her head. His Diana, Toby called her. Goddess of the hunt. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In this lush and seductive novel, exciting new author Tessa Dare takes desire to brazen heights. Ever the bold adventuress, Lucy Waltham has decided to go hunting for a husband. But first she needs some target practice. So she turns to her brother’ s best friend, Jeremy Trescott, the Earl of Kendall, to hone her seductive wiles on him before setting her sights on another man. But her practice kisses spark a smoldering passion–one that could send all her plans up in smoke. Jeremy has an influential title, a vast fortune, and a painful past full of long-buried secrets. He keeps a safe distance from his own emotions, but to distract Lucy from her reckless scheming, he must give his passions free rein. Their sensual battle of wills is as maddening as it is delicious, but the longer he succeeds in managing the headstrong temptress, the closer Jeremy comes to losing control. When scandal breaks, can he bring himself to abandon Lucy to her ruin? Or will he risk his heart and claim her for his own?

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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★★★★
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★★★
15%
(242)
★★
7%
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23%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Fantastic Historical Debut

Every year there seems to be one debut author who bursts upon the scene and absolutely knocks my socks off with her superb writing skill. This year, that author is Tessa Dare. In her debut book, GODDESS OF THE HUNT, Dare showcases her command of the English language with exquisite prose that sings across the pages with a lyrical quality that is a joy to read. Her characters are so vividly drawn that they practically leap from the pages and her story unerringly hits all the right notes.

Irrepressible Lucy Waltham has fancied herself in love with Sir Toby since the tender age of eleven, when her older brother's friend dubbed her his "Diana, Goddess of the Hunt". She has bided her time, knowing in her heart that one day Toby would awaken to his real feelings for her, but now, eight years later, her brother's friends have arrived for their annual gathering and, for the first time, Toby is exhibiting a serious interest in someone. Lucy has no choice but to seduce him and show him that she is the woman of his dreams and the one he is meant to marry, not Miss Sophia Hathaway. Unfortunately for Lucy, she has never even been kissed but she has a book that explains everything. All she needs now is someone with whom to practice.

Jeremy Trescott has always treasured his visits to Waltham Manor, the home of his good friend, Henry Waltham. It's the only place where he has ever been able to relax and be himself. Growing up with parents who showed neither love nor appreciation for their son, Jeremy learned to close off his emotions years ago. In truth, the only person who has ever been able to get a rise out of him is Lucy, his friend's exasperating younger sister and in Jeremy's own words, his "personal version of a biblical plague." Now she shows up at his bedroom door in the middle of the night with the crazy idea that she is going to seduce Toby...after honing her skills with him! If only she wasn't proving to be such a fast learner.

I have always enjoyed the "brother's best friend" storyline and I was intrigued by Dare's unique spin on the concept. Lucy does indeed fall for her brother's friend, just not the one that she, and everyone else, expected. But the self admission of her feelings isn't the end of this story but, rather, the beginning of the second half of the book for her greatest challenge, winning Jeremy's love, is still to be achieved and this is one hero who doesn't make it easy.

That perhaps is Dare's greatest talent as a writer. Aside from the scintillating banter, the lovely, lyrical prose, the humor and angst of young and unrequited love, this is an author who made me care about her characters - all of her characters. I highly recommend GODDESS OF THE HUNT. The next two books in this trilogy, SURRENDER OF A SIREN and A LADY OF PERSUASION will be released August 25th and September 29th, respectively. I'll be counting the days!
42 people found this helpful
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Delightful Historical Romance (A- Grade)

Delightful, sweet and sexy are only a few words that come to mind when I finished reading Goddess of the Hunt by Tessa Dare. This is Tessa's first book and I applaud her for writing a lovely historical romance with the witty dialogue and lush descriptions of the setting and the character's thoughts. I am not a big fan of long descriptive paragraphs, but with Goddess of the Hunt, all my senses were engaged. I wanted this book to go on and on because it was that good.

Goddess of the Hunt has one of the best openings I have read in awhile. A young man wakes up in the middle of the night because of a knock at his bedroom door. Thinking it is an emergency he opens it and is kissed by a female. The female is Lucy Waltham. Jeremy Trescott, the Earl of Kendall has known Lucy forever because he is friends with the family. He has been invited to stay at Waltham Manor for an annual sporting holiday. Jeremy is befuddled not only because he has been accosted in the middle of the night, but Lucy can't kiss for anything. The reason Lucy is kissing Jeremy is because she needs practice. She wants to seduce Toby, another lord staying at the Manor who is friends with Jeremy and Lucy's older brother Henry. Toby is practically engaged to a Miss Sophia Hathaway. Lucy has always had a crush on Toby and wants to stop the engagement. She thinks is she can seduce Toby, he will jilt Miss Hathaway and marry her instead.

Jeremy finds Lucy to be a silly, immature girl. She has no sense of decorum and does whatever she wants. This belief is in part because he feels like an older brother to her. Jeremy doesn't want Lucy's heart to get broken, but she is such a headstrong girl. Lucy can't help but tease Jeremy and he gives Lucy a kiss that will change the dynamics of their relationship.

Lucy is very set on the course she has in order to gain Toby's affections. But since Toby also has known her as Jeremy has, she has to change the way she does things. She will try to be a bit more like Miss Hathaway so Toby can love the new Lucy. Jeremy can see what she is doing and for some reason he doesn't like Lucy to pretend to be someone she's not. His opinion of Lucy begins to change. Gone is the gangly hoyden and thorn in his side as he always thought her to be. Now Lucy has become an enigma to him. All he wants to do is kiss her and touch her even though she believes she is in love with another man. Jeremy is now on a mission to make Lucy see that Toby will never be hers and he will use his own seductive techniques to change her mind. Lucy will not be convinced with words, so Jeremy will have to use his mouth in other ways to make Lucy see reason.

Jeremy's talented ways with his hands and mouth confuse Lucy. She enjoys these intimacies but she is so set on Toby. Things between Jeremy and Lucy are building to the point where Jeremy has no choice but to claim Lucy through marriage. They both thinkthis is a big mistake, but Lucy is the one who will try to make it work between them. Unfortunately something from Jeremy's past makes him place up a wall between them. Jeremy should know that Lucy will not allow Jeremy to walk all over her and become cold to the point where she will reject him. First she was on the hunt for another man but now that she has Jeremy she will do whatever she can to make him see she is worthy of his love and he can trust her with his heart and all those imperfections he feels about himself that he keeps bottled up inside.

Goddess of the Hunt is a darling historical romance and quite the feat for Tessa Dare. She had me hooked from page one with the innocent Lucy practicing her kissing with Jeremy. I am more of a fan of the hero in the books I read, but with Goddess of the Hunt it was all about Lucy. She may seem innocent in her thinking but Lucy can be sly at times but in an endearing way. Everything she does is in good faith. She is not cruel or heartless. Lucy is someone you would love to have over for tea and call your friend. Jeremy is a bit tortured, but his issues didn't take away from the overall enjoyment in the story. His and Lucy's interactions are nice and steamy.

Count me as a Tessa Dare fan. I will not be surprised in the least becomes a best selling author. She is the beginning of a great roster of historical authors to come and one with great promise.

Katiebabs
7 people found this helpful
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Kind of boring and silly

I am reading this book as part of my re-read stack. I don't remember much from my first read and my current re-read isn't going to put this back into the re-read pile. The writing is not bad although there isn't much historical detail. Although the tone is light-hearted, there isn't much humor. The story itself is a pretty common theme, worked over many times before and the author's attempt isn't anything out of the ordinary. As others have said, silly misunderstandings make up 50% of the book.

The heroine is pretty boring : 19 year old without any life experiences, accomplishments or empathy. Except she eats a lot (purrs over lobster bisque, squeals over chocolate cake), likes to fish, ride a horse, climb trees. It is always somewhat difficult to reconcile the age of the heroine in the HRs but I guess that is how it is considering Elizabeth Bennet (Pride and Prejudice) was 20 and Jane Eyre when she met Mr Rochester was about 18 or so. It could very well be that in the 1800s women grew up a lot more quickly than modern women but modern authors tend to fit a heroine with modern sensibilities into a historical setting and that often fails. So Lucy, our heroine, is portrayed as a 19 year old with thoughts and personality more cognizant of an immature and spoilt 21st century teenager than a poised 19th century young woman. This difference is all the more evident when the heroine tries to adjust (or not) to married life and still carries on as if she has no responsibility at all. This point has been noted in several other reviews. As Lucy is from the landed gentry class, it seems unrealistic to portray her as having no manners (squealing when the footman pushes her chair in at dinner) and lacking in any training to manage a household. So Lucy's characterization didn't work for me. Portraying Lucy as an airhead may be how the author is driving the plot but this occurs at the expense of good storytelling.

The hero, Jeremy, is 10 years older and for most of the book, it seems his relationship with Lucy is based on physical pleasure rather than any emotional understanding. His overwhelming reactions to Lucy's thoughtless escapades are again a ploy to move the story along which otherwise has stalled. But he didn't explain the basis for his protectiveness which seems quite unrealistic to me again.
6 people found this helpful
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Not my kind of story. But many like this.

I read 130 pages and stopped. There was a lot of pondering one’s feelings, tempting each other with kisses, and descriptive writing. I just wasn’t interested in the characters or the set up. I was bored. Lucy loves Toby. Toby plans to marry Sophia. So Lucy wants to seduce Toby and convince him to marry her instead. Toby knows Lucy wants him but he doesn’t want to tell Lucy the truth. So Toby asks Jeremy to occupy and distract Lucy until Toby proposes to Sophia later. Toby wants to delay getting engaged because he’s enjoying his bachelor days. Lucy wants to make Toby jealous and asks Jeremy to help her. Jeremy reluctantly agrees to help each of them. When he kisses Lucy he feels lust.

This reminded me of Whitney, My Love and Gone With The Wind because the heroine has an obsessive love for a man who does not reciprocate but leads her on. The hero is aware of this. If you like this trope, consider Whitney, My Love. I gave 5 stars to the expanded version (not original version).

I’ve read five books by this author. She is not a winner for me, but I really enjoyed one of her books, a novella, The Scandalous, Dissolute, No-Good Mr. Wright.

DATA:
Narrative mode: 3rd person. Story length: 360 pages. Swearing language: mild. Sexual content: some. Setting: 1817 England. Copyright: 2009. Genre: regency romance.
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An excellent beginning.

Set in the year 1817. For the last several years Henry Waltham has hosted an annual hunting party in the autumn for his three closest friends at Waltham Manor. The only female among them had been his little sister, Lucinda "Lucy". Little Lucy has adored Sir Toby Aldridge since the first gathering when he dubbed her his "Diana, Goddess of the Hunt". Lucy never went off to school or had a Season in London. Henry kept Lucy at home, her education taught by a never-ending-line of governesses. But then Henry wed.

Looking back, it seems to Lucy that Henry's marriage is what began all her current problems. Felix, one of Henry's three friends, followed Henry's example and has recently wed. As much as Felix's new wife and Lucy dislike one another, Lucy feels that she could simply ignore the spiteful woman. Problem is that the hag brought her sister, Sophia Hathaway, to the hunting party this year and Toby is so smitten by her that he plans to propose. Desperate to turn Toby's affections toward herself, Lucy decides to seduce Toby. She even read a book on how to do so. For practice, Lucy wakes up Jeremy Trescott, the sixth Earl of Kendall.

After eight annual hunting parties with Lucy, none of Henry's three friends see Lucy as the desirable young lady of marriageable age in which she has become. Yet all the gentlemen, including Henry, have known about Lucy's crush on Sir Toby. But when Lucy wakes Jeremy up in the middle of the night to practice kissing seductively with him, Jeremy knows the men have a real problem. The men decide that Jeremy should distract Lucy from Toby and Sophia by paying a bit of romantic attention to her. Jeremy dares not inform them that after Lucy's practice kisses his brotherly feelings toward her have changed. Then Lucy comes up with a plan for Jeremy to help her make Toby jealous by pretending to court her. What starts out as Jeremy's way to eventually help Lucy keep her pride once Toby proposes to Sophia turns into self-torture, because Jeremy has begun to crave Lucy's kisses.

**** FOUR STARS! Tessa Dare's writing talent shines through on every page. This story is so well written that I could easily feel Lucy's desperation and later her confusion about her feelings. Yet I also understood why Jeremy kept silent about his own troubling past, as well as why he felt he did not deserve Lucy. Those of us who were tom-boys in our youths will easily relate to Lucy's situation. I loved every minute. I look forward to reading Sophia's story, [[ASIN:0345506871 Surrender of a Siren: A Novel]]. ****

Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.
4 people found this helpful
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Couldn't Put it Down!

I ignored all of my weekend chores and read this book in one sitting! It was funny and romantic. I don't like to know too many details about books that I am going to read..so..I will just say that this is a definite must read romance novel for this year....I am sure that the next two will be equally engaging! I can't wait for them to get here! If you like humor in your romance (and who doesn't?? really??) then this book is for you!
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Cliche storyline, but very well written

This book was actually recommended by my local library. Although well written, it had the typical cliches of most historical romances (which is why I had stopped reading them.) The 20 year old virgin and the 30 year old rake -- what's new!

I gave this book such a high rating because the quality of writing was very good, Dare just needs to be more inventive in her storylines. I read the next book in the series (Surrender of a Siren) and she had the same problem -- well written, but a storyline that has been seen a hundred times. The attraction and sexual tension between Lucy and Jeremy were very believable. And I liked the character of Sophia (seen again in the next novel).

There was a lot of misunderstanding between the characters -- things said, or not said, taken the wrong way. Some of the scenes were actually emotionally painful. There was one extremely well written scene where Lucy collapses to the floor crying over her dead parents and all she wants is Jeremy to comfort her. But, Jeremy was taught by his mother that when a woman cries, it is his fault and he must leave immediately. The pain of both characters in that scene was palpable.

If you like historical romances, this is excellent. If you prefer modern romances (like myself) it's worth reading if you are looking for a book.
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Enjoyable***

I especially liked the opening of the book. It brought the main two characters together right away. Very unique approach - and that was why I got hooked right away. There were some funny dialogues (but suspiciously modern)and the heroine is "refreshingly modern". The story line in the end was mediocre (but what do I expect from a historical romance novel!) Overall, I enjoyed the story.
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MY EYES WERE EATING THE WORDS ON EACH PAGE!!

Ohhhhh myyyy! LOADS of romance with the most descriptive, beautiful writing from author Tessa Dare. I FELL IN LOVE with the characters and the entire plot! YOU MUST BUY THIS ONE. You won't regret it my friends.
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Glad I finally picked this one up...I didn't know what I was missing.

I'm not going to lie, I have had this book on my TBR pile for well over a year now. I remember that I bought it at a library book sale and that the story looked promising but I hated the cover. I will be totally honest, I am a cover girl. I will buy almost any book if it has a great cover. There have been many a good book that took me years to read because I just flat out hated the cover. That was the case for me with this book. It was so boring and it just looked like it would be a slightly slower story once I openned it. Can I just say with this book, I was completely wrong. I adored this book! It started off with a bang and didn't slow down until I turned the last page.

Lucy Waltham has been living with her brother Henry ever since both of her parents died. Lucy is a tomboy and is completely in love with Henry's friend Sir Tobias Aldridge and has been for eight years. She has found out that Toby has plans to propose to Sophia Hathaway who is also staying at the estate. Lucy decides that she will try and seduce Toby but in order to do that she must practice on her brothers other friend Jeremy Trescott, Earl of Kendall. After three kisses Jeremy has realized that his best friends younger sister Lucy is no longer a girl but a fiery woman and he cannot stop thinking about her.

This book was so much more than just two people finding love with one another. We are able to see the growth between both characters. I was able to see the love that both had for eachother. It might not have been an easy road but they still made it in the end. I definitely recommend this book.
1 people found this helpful