Moonstruck Madness (Dominick Trilogy)
Moonstruck Madness (Dominick Trilogy) book cover

Moonstruck Madness (Dominick Trilogy)

Paperback – February 1, 2011

Price
$5.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
384
Publisher
Sourcebooks Casablanca
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1402242434
Dimensions
5 x 1 x 8 inches
Weight
9.6 ounces

Description

"With entertaining characters, intriguing plots, and steamy romance, this novel will have the reader eagerly turning each page. " - Night Owl Romance "An enjoyable and unique historical romp." - The Long and Short of It Reviews "As powerful now as at its first publication in 1977, Moonstruck Madness transports you to a fascinating world of high drama and high stakes where power reigns until love finally wins." - Linda Banche Romance Author "The story is a non stop action packed romance with sizzle, sparks and flames aplenty" - Yankee Romance Reviewers "Laurie McBain has crafted a novel that will grab the interest of the reader from the first page. " - Debbie's Book Bag "Interesting, intriguing, spellbinding." - Seriously Reviewed "It will kept you on the edge of your seat,with you heart in your throat. A must read and a keeper. " - My Book Addiction and More "If you want to read a good old fashioned romance you can't go wrong with this one. " - Celtic Lady's Reviews "Alluring... A very lovely little romance that you should defiantly check out!" - The Royal Reviews "You will not find a couple more exciting to read about and a romance so full of plot." - Books Like Breathing Laurie McBain became a publishing phenomenon at age twenty-six with her first historical romance. She wrote seven romances, all of which were bestsellers, selling over 11 million copies. All have been out of print for over 5 years. She is a winner of the RT Reviewers' Choice Award. She lives in the Bay Area. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power, And all that beauty, all that wealth e'er gave, Awaits alike the inevitable hour. The paths of glory lead but to the grave. -Thomas Gray Prelude Culloden Moor, Scotland, 1746 A northeast wind blowing rain and sleet welcomed the early morning watchers on the hill, their cloaked figures cowering together in vain for protection from the cold, penetrating wetness that seeped through to the skin. Some distance away, and farther down the slope of the moor, a lone figure crouched low in the heather. Sabrina Verrick hugged her cape more tightly around her as she stared in horrified fascination at the scene before her. The battlefield was the only patch of color across the wide expanse of gray moor. Colorful blue, yellow, and green standards waved above the scarlet-coated battalions of the English king's army, its Union flag boldly flying in Scottish skies. Sabrina raised her head and felt the icy rain fall on her face. In the distance she could hear the monotonous beating of the drums. Drums beating in time for marching English feet, bringing them closer to the bright tartan plaid of the clans. Below her Sabrina could see her clan with her grandfather stalwartly leading them. His bonnet, trimmed with eagles' feathers, was cocked jauntily over his weathered brow, the blues and reds of his tartan jacket and kilt now darkened by the rain; but on his left shoulder the silver and cairngorm brooch that pinned his plaid still gleamed richly. He'd drawn his broadsword and was swinging its double-edged blade threateningly before him. He stood tall and magnificent before his men as they awaited the signal to attack. A burnt wooden cross, tied together by a piece of bloodstained linen, leaned crookedly in the ground-silent now that the call to arms had been answered. The haunting notes of the bagpipes echoed through the air as the fierce Highlanders surged forward to meet the enemy, their heavy broadswords singing as they sliced through the air in defiance of the shining bayonets of the English. But few reached the English ranks before they were cut down by the roaring cannon ripping through the clans, dismembering and leaving only parts of bodies where once bold men had stood. Sabrina screamed in terror as she saw half her clan wiped out by a single volley of cannon. Those who managed to escape the barrage of cannon fire were left to be cut down by the continuous, evenly timed musket fire that never stopped coming in waves of death and destruction. Sabrina felt the bile rise in her throat as she stared down at the massacre. Red was the only color that penetrated her numbed mind. Scarlet coats, bloodied swords and red-stained heather jumped before her eyes as English and Scot lay dying alike. It was impossible to separate the two enemies now. They were one surging mass of violence. Sabrina narrowed her eyes, straining them as she searched for her grandfather among the men below her, praying that she wouldn't see him crumpled to the ground with the countless others. Where was he? Where was her clan? She stayed low, sinking down into the heather as she sought desperately for a sight of their tartan. She turned suddenly at screams behind her and watched in disbelief as English soldiers, gradually making their way up the slope, bayoneted the small group of watchers on the hill. They began to scatter in panic, running for their lives as the soldiers bore down upon them, ruthlessly cutting down everything in their path. Sabrina remained still, afraid to move at all lest she meet the same fate. As she silently stared at the battlefield she caught a flickering movement as a small band of men made their retreat through the mangled bodies of their comrades and the enemy, escaping the field of their devastating defeat. Three carried her grandfather, and what was left of the clan limped along behind, their broadswords still raised to ward off any attack from the rear. They were not the only ones fleeing the moor. The battle had been lost. The clans were now trying to gather together what remained of their members and escape to safety in the hidden glens and lochs, losing themselves forever up in the craggy hills and unapproachable valleys that cut in deep chasms through the barren countryside. Sabrina carefully fled her hiding place and followed. She ran as though the devil were at her heels, running until her breath came painfully and her legs felt leaden. She followed them up into a narrow opening that twisted and climbed until the slaughter across the moor was hidden from view, and made her way through the passage, her mind a blank until she saw a small sod-and-stone cottage, little more than a hut, some distance ahead. "Let me pass," she told the guard blocking the door, his bloodied broadsword held defiantly before her, barring her way. "Nay, lass, I couldna' dae that," he answered slowly, his blue eyes still dazed from shock. His face was darkened by streaks of blood from a deep wound beside his ear that was now clotted with dried blood the color of his hair. "I'm the laird's granddaughter. I must be with him!" Sabrina cried, pushing past the beaten sentinel who gave easily and moved wearily aside. Sabrina stopped abruptly as she entered the one-room hut. A peat fire was burning weakly in the middle of the room while an old woman squatted nearby, a worn shawl wrapped about her thin shoulders as she steadily stirred a rusted iron pot that hung over the fire. A sickening sweet odor of stewed mutton floated to Sabrina as she moved into the room. It was quiet, deathly quiet, as if all the men had died. They watched silently as Sabrina walked to the far end of the room and knelt down beside her grandfather. She choked back the sob that rose from her throat as she stared at his broken body. He was breathing heavily, an odd rasping sound that shook his chest in deep, painful shudders. "Oh, Grandfather, what have they done to you?" Sabrina sobbed as she wiped the blood trickling from the corner of his lips with the edge of her cape. "Grape. Tha' did it." A voice spoke sharply beside Sabrina. Sabrina looked up into the blazing eyes of the man bending over the other side of her grandfather. His eyes were the only spot of color in his pale face. They glowed fanatically as they stared into hers, hatred pouring out of his soul. "It wae like a thousand knives bein' thrown at us. They couldna' just shoot us doon, nay, they had tae cripple us with tha'," he said bitterly, indicating the rusty iron, nails and leaden balls that littered the ground, shreds of tartan still clinging to some. "Ripping us apart, aul tae pieces, nae knowin' wha' hit us." He looked down at Sabrina's grandfather, a frown between his eyes. "They even got the auld laird," he mumbled as if he couldn't believe it yet. He looked at his own bloodied hands, rubbing his fingers convulsively. "But they did nae get me pipes. I'll play for ye ever' nicht," he promised the laird. "They'll nae stop Ewan MacElden." Sabrina was staring in alarm at the half-crazed man when she felt her hand grasped by shaking fingers and looked down to see her grandfather's eyes opening. She closed her hands about his cold fingers, trying to warm them as she looked into his face. It was devoid of expression and feeling, and she knew she gazed into a death mask. His eyes seemed to be pleading with her and she bent lower as his lips parted. "Shouldna' come doon from the hills. Waur fools tae fight in the open. Slaughtered like sheep," he whispered, his usually perfect English now thickened with an accent. "Please, Grandfather, don't speak," Sabrina pleaded, "we'll get you back to the castle." Sabrina looked to the others who stood silently about her. There were only five or six of them, and she wondered frantically why they just stood there. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • "The plot has imaginative twists and turns, and the backgrounds are lush and evocative. It's good, satisfying fun."
  • -
  • Publishers Weekly
  • She's one thing by day, something else altogether by night...
  • After escaping the slaughter of her clan at a young age, Scottish noblewoman Sabrina Verrick provides for her siblings by living a double life, until the night she encounters the Duke, and her secret and all she holds dear is threatened...
  • He's so disillusioned, he's completely vulnerable...
  • With his inheritance at stake, Lucien, Duke of Camareigh, sets a trap for the Scottish beauty with the piercing violet eyes, never imagining what will happen when the trap is sprung...
  • As their lives become irreversibly entangled, Lucien and Sabrina become each other's biggest threat, as well as their only salvation...
  • Praise for Laurie McBain:
  • "Ms. McBain's flare for the romantic intermingled with suspense will keep the reader riveted to the story until the last page." -Affaire de Coeur
  • "Vivid sense of description, colorful characters... I found myself happily lost in the magnificence of the storytelling." -Los Angeles Herald Examiner
  • Dominick Trilogy:
  • Moonstruck Madness Chance the Winds of FortuneDark Before the Rising Storm

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(320)
★★★★
25%
(134)
★★★
15%
(80)
★★
7%
(37)
-7%
(-37)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Moonstruck Madness

My thoughts:

This book was first published in the 70s and it shows, it was a different time for romance.

I will go back to the beginning first. Sabrina is living in England and to support her family she is a highwayman. She is a hellcat with claws. One night she steals from Lucien, the Duke of Camareigh and he wants "him, the highwayman" dead. Well we all know that is not gonna happen.

I do wonder what it is about old romance and all the drama. Oh these people hate each other, and say so too, and then the passion takes over. They just can't decide. One time she slaps him, and he slaps her back. Now I winched but decided to blame it on the old school romance thing, still, so uncool, you do not hit a woman.

The other thing is that she is 17, and he is in his 30s. Truth be told I do not have a problem with that, the book takes place 250 years ago and there was nothing strange about it then.

But the thing I did not like was the drama. These two should just have sat down and talked, instead of yelling, running away, doing stupid things and being so angry all the time *looking at you Sabrina*.

Still it was an amusing tale, she had guts being a highwayman, and then there was the sidestory that stole my attention. The Colonel sent to find the wicked highwayman, and her sister Mary who has the sight.

Recommendation and final thoughts:

The story is sure not like they write them now, it's fun to see how things have changed. And the title does fit, they go mad, that's for sure.

Reason for reading:

Sounded good
1 people found this helpful
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INTERESTING

GOOD STORY
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Incredible characters and wonderful story with castles and dukes etc.

this story begins with memoable characters and is totally one of my favorite books ever!
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Good fun! Read this book many years ago

Good fun! Read this book many years ago. Like that the main character is independent and not a victim.
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Moonstruck Madness

Just as you think the story would be ending there is another twist to the plot.
Sabrina, as a child of twelve, along with her older sister, Mary, younger brother, Richard, and their Aunt, escaped from battle torn Scotland to return to the neglected family country home in England. Sabrina begins a life as a highwayman known as Bonnie Charlie to support their family.

Now Sabrina is a feisty seventeen year old thinking that she cannot be caught. She arrogantly walks into a trap set by the Duke of Camareigh, one of her victims. The Duke, Lucien, is rakishly handsome and is even more arrogant than Sabrina. He wants revenge even if he is surprised to discover the bold highwayman is really just a slip of a girl. Sabrina escapes setting off a battle of revenge against each other. There is great passion between them but instead of expressing itself as love it is served up in defiance, anger and hate.

Sabrina and Mary unexpectedly meet their father who decides that he can get some handsome settlements by marrying his two beautiful daughters to wealthy husbands. Sabrina is set to defy him but finally determines she will marry a rich nobleman to save her sister and brother. Just as she sets up to catch a mate, Lucien steps in to foil her plans. Her latest humiliation by Lucien sets her even more determinedly against him.

Lucien is supposed to marry a woman chosen by his Grandmother within a few weeks or his inheritance will go to his cousin, Percy. When his fiancé disappears he sets his sights on wedding Sabrina even if she is unwilling.

There are lots of extra subplots going on while Sabrina and Lucien are wrangling. Lucien's cousins are plotting to kill him so they will inherit. Meanwhile, Sabrina's sister, Mary, begins a friendship with the English soldier who is leading the search for Bonnie Charlie. It just so happens he is a soldier who Sabrina met back in Scotland and he suspects her nefarious activities.

Everything is crashing out of control for Sabrina. Sabrina and Lucien continually knock heads with their stubbornness but the top, exceedingly frustrating, stubbornness honors go to Sabrina. As Lucien says at one point... she needs to grow-up. The conflict is sort of fun but borders on becoming annoying. It is saved by all the little twists.

The descriptions of the countryside and the homes are rich with detail which adds a fullness to the story. I enjoyed the twisting surprises that kept popping up even to the end. I was glad that this book did not have the same disjointedness I noted in Devil's Desire. The author did a fine job of taking some plotlines that may seem old but adding enough twists and turns to keep them interesting. I recommend this to readers who like a story with lots of emotional conflict to get through and lots of little subplots to liven up the main romance.
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Making Difficult Choices to Survive

MOONSTRUCK MADNESS by Laurie McBain is a fast-paced, engrossing novel of the difficult choices people make to survive in a cruel world.

After losing everything in the aftermath of the 1746 Scottish Battle of Culloden, Sabrina must find a way to support her family. Her unorthodox method incurs the wrath of the arrogant and powerful Lucien, Duke of Camareigh. Again and again, these two strong personalities clash in a titanic battle of wills, even as an unwilling attraction seizes them both. But Lucien is promised to another and must marry to secure his estate.

Sabrina is bold almost to the point of recklessness as she does what she needs to in a harsh Georgian England which casts women as pawns. The utterly arrogant Lucien, although too abrasive for my taste, is appropriate to this period when an aristocrat's word was law. The villains, also, were too villainous for me, but again, are in keeping with this era of extremes.

As powerful now as at its first publication in 1977, MOONSTRUCK MADNESS transports you to a fascinating world of high drama and high stakes where power reigns until love finally wins.

Linda Banche
ARC provided by Sourcebooks
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Fun Female Robin Hood Tale

This book was a lot of fun; even if it did start at the battle of Culloden. Young Sabrina watches the destruction of all she holds dear and just manages to escape to England with the few remaining members of her family. They settle into the broken down manor house of her English father who had abandoned them in Scotland when her mother died. But how will they live? They have no money....
This is where the fun begins! Sabrina takes on the guise of a highwayman and with the help of two very large henchmen she manages to keep her family fed and help the people in the village. Rather like a female Robin Hood. All goes well until she meets the Duke of Camareigh who does not take well to being robbed.
The love story develops as do most with the two of them hating each other but finding themselves forced into marriage for a number of reasons. The writing is easy and the premise enough different that the two warring lovers are a delight to follow as they finally realize that they are, indeed perfect for one another. The ancillary characters are well developed and add depth and interest to the plot. I truly enjoyed reading this book.
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If you are a fan of Kathleen Woodweiss's older books, you will enjoy Moonstruck Madness.

Moonstruck Madness by Laurie McBain
Historical Romance - Feb. 1st, 2011
4 stars

Driven from Scotland by the English from a young age, Sabrina Verrick arrives at England with her family, poor and destitute, and filled with hatred against the English. Although they have a house that belongs to their absentee father, they barely have enough money to feed and clothe themselves. Driven by circumstances and her anger, Sabrina transforms into Bonnie Charlie, a highway man that wears a Scottish plaid and terrorizes the rich noblemen in the vicinity. When she and her gang unwittingly steals from and taunts the Duke of Camareigh, Lucien, he vows to catch Bonnie Charlie. Sabrina, in her arrogance, falls into a trap laid by the Duke and is exposed as woman. Seeing that the highway man is actually a violet eyed beauty, Lucien swears that he will possess her completely. But, Sabrina gives him the slip. And from then on, the chase is on...

The plot summary above does not do justice to the number of twists and turns in this book. I can't believe how many things happen in a space of 360 odd pages. Moonstruck Madness is a whirlwind of excitement and romance. An extraordinarily beautiful heroine, a cruel and cold hero, the insane amount of conflicts/arguments between the two of them, and all the soap-opera plot devices. That's not necessarily a bad mixture, just different and more action-packed than the romances written today. The hero, Lucien, in contrast, is a bad man compared to most romance heroes written today. Not naughty, rakish bad, but cold and unfeeling. Sometimes I didn't like the way he treated Sabrina. But, sometimes, I don't necessarily like the way she deals with him either! They definitely play off each other.

All in all, a very busy romance filled with sword fighting, murder, evil plots, murderous cousins, and fantastic clashes between the hero and heroine. If you are a fan of Kathleen Woodweiss's older books, you will enjoy Moonstruck Madness.

Reviewed by Pauline by Bookaholics Romance Club