Shadow Music: A Novel
Shadow Music: A Novel book cover

Shadow Music: A Novel

Hardcover – December 26, 2007

Price
$13.76
Format
Hardcover
Pages
352
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345500731
Dimensions
6.75 x 1.5 x 9.5 inches
Weight
1.25 pounds

Description

About the Author Julie Garwood is the author of numerous New York Times bestsellers, including Shadow Dance, Slow Burn, Murder List, Killjoy, Mercy, Heartbreaker, Ransom, and Come the Spring. There are more than thirty-two million copies of her books in print. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. One Wellingshire, England Princess Gabrielle was barely six years old when she was summoned to her mother’s deathbed. Escorting her was her faithful guard, two soldiers on either side, their gait slow so she could keep up with them as they solemnly made their way down the long corridor. The only sound was their boots clicking against the cold stone floor.Gabrielle had been called to her mother’s deathbed so many times she’d lost count.As she walked, she kept her head bowed, staring intently at the shiny rock she’d found. Mother was going to love it. It was black with a tiny white streak zigzagging all around it. One side was as smooth as her mother’s hand when she stroked the side of Gabrielle’s face. The rock’s other side was as rough as her papa’s whiskers.Every day at sunset Gabrielle brought her mother a different treasure. Two days ago she’d captured a butterfly. It had such pretty wings, gold with purple splotches. Mother declared it was the most beautiful butterfly she’d ever seen. She praised Gabrielle for being so gentle with one of God’s creatures as she walked to the window and let it fly away.Yesterday Gabrielle had gathered flowers from the hill outside the castle walls. The scent of heather and honey had surrounded her, and she thought the lovely aroma even more pleasing than her mother’s special oils and perfumes. Gabrielle had tied a pretty ribbon around the stems and tried to fashion a nice bow, but she didn’t know how and she’d made a mess of it. The ribbon had come undone before she handed the bouquet to her mother.Rocks were Mother’s favorite treasures. She kept a basketful that Gabrielle had collected for her on a table next to her bed, and she would love this rock most of all.Gabrielle wasn’t worried about today’s visit. Her mother had promised that she wouldn’t go away to heaven any time soon, and she never broke her promises.The sun cast shadows along the stone walls and floor. If Gabrielle hadn’t been on an errand with her rock, she would have liked to chase the shadows and try to capture one. The long corridor was one of her favorite places to play. She loved to hop on one foot from one stone to another and see how far she could get before falling. She hadn’t made it to the second arched window yet, and there were five more windows to go.Sometimes she closed her eyes, stretched her arms out wide, and spun and spun until she lost her balance and tumbled to the floor, so dizzy the walls seemed to fly about her head.Most of all, she loved to run down the corridor, especially when her father was home. He was such a big, grand man, taller than any of the pillars in the church. Her papa would call to her and wait until she reached him. Then he scooped her up into his arms and lifted her high above his head. If they were in the courtyard, she raised her hands to the sky, certain she could almost touch a cloud. Papa always pretended to lose his grip so that she would think he was about to drop her. She knew he never would, but she squealed with delight over the possibility. She wrapped her arms around his neck and held tight as he strode toward her mother’s rooms. When he was in an especially happy mood he would sing. Papa had a terrible singing voice, and sometimes Gabrielle giggled and covered her ears it was so awful, but she never really laughed. She didn’t want to hurt his tender feelings.Papa wasn’t at home today. He had left Wellingshire to visit his uncle Morgan in northern England, and he wouldn’t be home for several days. Gabrielle wasn’t concerned. Mother wouldn’t die without him by her side.Stephen, the leader of the guards, opened the door to her mother’s chamber and coaxed Gabrielle to enter by giving her a gentle little nudge between her shoulder blades. “Go on, Princess,” he urged.She turned around with a disgruntled frown. “Papa says you’re to call my mama Princess Genevieve, and you’re supposed to call me Lady Gabrielle.”“Here in England, you are Lady Gabrielle,” He tapped the crest emblazoned on his tunic, “But in St. Biel, you are our princess. Now go, your mother is waiting.”Seeing Gabrielle, her mother called out. Her voice was weak, and she looked terribly pale. For as long as Gabrielle could remember, her mother had stayed in bed. Her legs had forgotten how to walk, she’d explained to Gabrielle, but she was hopeful, praying that they would one day remember. If that miracle were to happen, she promised Gabrielle that she would stand barefoot in the clear stream to gather stones with her daughter.And she would dance with Papa, too.The chamber was crowded with people. They made a narrow path for her. The priest, Father Gartner, was chanting his prayer in a low whisper near the alcove, and the royal physician, who always frowned and liked to make her mother bleed with his black, slimy bugs, was also in attendance. Gabrielle was thankful he hadn’t put any bugs on her mother’s arms today.The maids, the stewards, and the housekeeper hovered beside the bed. Mother put down her tapestry and needle, shooed the servants away, and motioned to Gabrielle.“Come and sit with me,” she ordered.Gabrielle ran across the room, climbed up onto the platform, and thrust the rock at her mother.“Oh, it’s beautiful,” she whispered as she took the rock and carefully examined it. “This is the best one yet,” she added with a nod.“Mother, you say that every time I bring you a rock. It’s always the best one.”Her mother patted a spot next to her. Gabrielle scooted closer and said, “You can’t die today. Remember? You promised.”“I remember.”“Papa will be awful angry, too, so you better not.”“Lean closer, Gabrielle,” her mother said. “I have need to whisper.”The sparkle in her eyes told Gabrielle she was playing her game again.“A secret? Are you going to tell me a secret?”The crowd moved forward. All were eager to hear what she would say.Gabrielle looked around the room. “Mother, why are all these people here? Why?”Her mother kissed her cheek. “They think that I know where a great treasure is hidden, and they hope that I will tell you where it is.”Gabrielle giggled. She liked this game. “Are you going to tell me?”“Not today,” she answered.“Not today,” Gabrielle repeated so that the curious onlookers would hear.Her mother struggled to sit up. The housekeeper rushed forward to place pillows behind her back. A moment later the physician announced that her color was improving.“I am feeling much better,” she said. “Leave us now,” she ordered, her voice growing stronger with each word. “I would like a moment alone with my daughter.”The physician looked as though he wanted to protest, but he kept silent as he ushered the group from the chamber. He motioned for two maids to stay behind. The women waited by the door to do their mistress’s bidding.“Are you feeling so much better you can tell me a story today?” Gabrielle asked.“I am,” she replied. “Which story would you like to hear?”“The princess story,” she eagerly answered.Her mother wasn’t surprised. Gabrielle always asked for the same story.“There once was a princess who lived in a faraway land called St. Biel,” her mother began. “Her home was a magnificent white castle high on the top of a mountain. Her uncle was the king. He was very kind to the princess, and she was very happy.”When her mother paused, Gabrielle blurted impatiently, “You’re the princess.”“Gabrielle, you know that I am and that this story is about your father and me.”“I know, but I like to hear you tell it.”Her mother continued. “When the princess was of age, a bargain was struck with Baron Geoffrey of Wellingshire. The princess was to marry the baron and live with him in England.”Because she knew that her daughter loved to hear about the wedding ceremony, the gowns, and the music, she went into great detail. The little girl clapped her hands with delight when she heard about the banquet feast, especially the description of the fruit tarts and honey cakes. By the end of the story, the mother’s narrative had become slow and labored. Exhaustion was catching up with her. The little girl took notice and, as was her ritual, she again made her mother promise she wouldn’t die today.“I promise. Now it is your turn to tell me the story I taught you.”“Every word just like you taught me, Mother? And just like your mother taught you?”She smiled. “Every word. And you will remember it and tell your daughters one day so they will know of their family and St. Biel.”Gabrielle grew solemn and closed her eyes to concentrate. She knew she must not forget a word of the story. This was her heritage, and her mother assured her that one day she would understand what that meant. She folded her hands in her lap and then opened her eyes again. Focusing on her mother’s encouraging smile, she began.“Once upon a time in the year of the violent storms that tore in from the sea . . .”

Features & Highlights

  • Throughout her acclaimed writing career, Julie Garwood has captivated readers with characters who are compelling, daring, and bursting with life. Now one of the most popular novelists of our time proudly returns to her beloved historical romance roots–in a thrilling tale of love, murder, adventure, and mystery set against the haunting landscape of medieval Scotland.For Princess Gabrielle of St. Biel, Scotland is a land of stunning vistas, wild chieftains, treacherous glens, and steep shadows–skullduggery, betrayal, and now murder. Prized for her exquisite beauty, the daughter of one of England’s most influential barons, Gabrielle is also a perfect bargaining chip for a king who needs peace in the Highlands: King John has arranged Gabrielle’s marriage to a good and gentle laird. But this marriage will never take place.For Gabrielle, everything changes in one last burst of freedom–when she and her guards come upon a scene of unimaginable cruelty. With one shot from her bow and arrow, Gabrielle takes a life, saves a life, and begins a war.Within days, the Highlands are aflame with passions as a battle royal flares between enemies old and new. Having come to Scotland to be married, Gabrielle is instead entangled in Highland intrigue. For two sadistic noblemen, underestimating Gabrielle’s bravery and prowess may prove fatal. But thanks to a secret Gabrielle possesses, Colm MacHugh, the most feared man in Scotland, finds a new cause for courage. Under his penetrating gaze, neither Gabrielle’s body nor heart is safe.A gripping novel that delves into the heart of emotions–unyielding passions of love, hate, revenge, and raw desire–Shadow Music is magnificent gift from Julie Garwood and a crowning achievement in her amazing career.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(2.8K)
★★★★
25%
(1.2K)
★★★
15%
(700)
★★
7%
(327)
-7%
(-326)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Who wrote this....no, I mean, who really wrote this?

Wow, I'd like an Alka Seltzer and a refund, not necessarily in that order. What a huge disappointment, and a hardcover disappointment at that.

Others have covered the plot particulars ad nauseum, and since they weren't worth discussing even once, I won't repeat them. Instead, I'll say this:

IF Julie Garwood indeed wrote this book, is it really the best she thinks her fans deserve? Her strengths in the past have included strong, likeable heroes and heroines, quirky but believable, who fit her historical style to a "T". Even the repetitive storylines (hard to avoid in romance) worked, because of the characters and her ability to make us root for them. And many of her stories were first-rate as well. Her earlier historicals are among my favorites, especially The Secret, The Wedding, The Prize, The Bride and of course, Honour's Splendor.

At some point, Ms. Garwood turned to writing "modern" romance; those books (yes, I actually bought one new based stricly on her name, then another used) were mediocre at best. The snap and vitality of her historical characters just didn't translate to modern times to make those works anything special. At least, not for me.

And now, after all these years, apparently Ms. Garwood has decided to settle for being a mediocre (at best) historical romance novelist as well. I know the "modern" romances didn't do as well (that happens when the work doesn't shine). But really....she just phoned this one in. It doesn't sound like her, doesn't work at any level, and has just become for me an expensive doorstop.

I've complained in earlier reviews of the dreck pumped out this year by so-called "established" historical romance writers; I was counting on Ms. Garwood to pull out an end of the year save (probably not entirely fair, because now I'm even more disgusted). But slogging through this thing has helped crystalize my New Year's resolutions:

1) No more advance orders, PARTICULARLY of established writers (except
Madeline Hunter who has NEVER let me down);
2) No more auto-buys based on "name" and/or "past performance";
3) Everything I read, I'll review and post;
4) Romance authors have websites, they want to hear from their "fans" -
well, they're going to hear from me.

Here's the thing, guys: If you're all happy with what you've been reading from the romance community this year, so be it...not everyone has the same requirements. If you're not (based on what I've read in the reviews here at Amazon, I'd say that's pretty much the case), then you have to be willing to say so in ways the writers and publishers understand. With your buying power.

When an established, admired and trusted romance writer can sell her fans this $18.00 waste of a tree...well, enough said. I'll be interested to see if this review sees the light of day.

Here's to a better 2008; that shouldn't be too hard.
269 people found this helpful
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A ghost writer?

The biggest issue I have with this book is that the voice in this book is not the Julie Garwood of THE PRIZE, SAVING GRACE, THE SECRET ect. I realize it has been a long time since we have had a historical offering from Ms Garwood, and that historical romances have evolved into well researched history as well as character driven stories, but Ms Garwood's voice has disappeared, Gone is the quirky funny heroine and the stern but lovable hero who is leveled by the love he feels for his heroine and her antics- typical Garwood "historical light", where the history is a subtle backdrop with characters who drive the romance.

Colm and Gabrielle, who don't even come together until after page 100, appear one dImensional: she hardly needs him as she is so perfect (Scottish Gaelic, not the language of King Wm's Scottish court, would hardly be a language she would have learned, at least in a previous book she had Jamie learn it from a native speaker adding a spark to the humor of the story) Garwood missed a chance for misunderstanding by having her heroine so perfect, hardly a reflection of real women of the period royal or not. And he is over shadowed by his brother who would have made a better hero. The inaccurate history takes the knowledgeable reader right out of the story in the beginning and could have been avoided as the elements/characters from other books could have been used as the devise to plot the story into the highlands. No fan expects indepth history from a Garwood novel but we do expect the scenarios to at least be believable and this one was flawed from the beginning and so out of character reflecting Ms Garwood's talent to weave a satisfying tale.

Sadly, the story so long anticipated by Garwood fans fell far short of her previous hardcovers and mass market fiction. It seems like this was done quickly to meet a publishing contract and had a feel as if some ghost writer was trying to emulate a Garwood romance but fell far short. Lets hope Ms Garwood doesn't abandon historicals in the future for her more successful romantic suspense. If you must read this book get it from the library or wait for the affordable mass market. This is not a hardcover quality romance and not anywhere near the best Ms Garwood has to offer.
91 people found this helpful
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So Disappointed!!!!!!

I only started reading Julie Garwood's historical novels this year. I absolutely loved them! I have read and reread "The Bride", "The Prize" "Ransom", "Honor's Splendour" "The Wedding", "Saving Grace" and "The Secret" so many times I practically have them memorized. I couldn't wait for "Shadow Music". Well, I read it the day it came out and NEVER have I been so disappointed in a book! I am not sure Ms. Garwood actually even wrote it. It took half of the book for the hero, Colm to meet the heroine, Gabrielle. They had no chemistry and in fact were never even together very much. I kept waiting for the magic of the other books but it never even got close. It took Ms. Garwood ten years to write this book and if this is what she is going to come up with I would say "Don't bother."!
79 people found this helpful
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Lady Mary Sue, please pick up the white courtesy phone

"Shadow Music" tells the story of Lady Gabrielle of St. Biel, a blonde Gaelic-speaking Byzantine royal of French stock who is sent by King John of England to quell troubles along the Scottish borders by marrying a Highland chieftain. The wedding is foiled and Gabrielle is banished from Britain after she saves a man from certain death. A liar wrongly besmirches her reputation, but Laird Colm MacHugh, the most feared man in the Highlands and the man whose brother she saved, marries her, only to have to fight off villains from both England and Scotland.

If you are a reader who cares even the tiniest bit about historical accuracy, you will be as unhappy with this book as I was. The idea that King John would marry a French-Byzantine princess living in London to a HIGHLAND chieftain in order to calm down the borders is laughable! Has Garwood never looked at a map of Scotland? (She obviously hasn't read a history of the country; the Highlands and Lowlands were ruled by different men at the time.) Does she know nothing about the relationships between the French and the Scots at this point in history? Does she not even understand how nobles were addressed, or the things women would not under pain of death have been *allowed* to do?

The story is also massively flawed by the heroine's unfailing perfection and her wildly anachronistic temperament and talents. Lady Gabrielle is the most beautiful woman on Earth, with long blonde hair and violet eyes (this despite being a Byzantine princess from near the Holy Land). She's an impossibly good bow-woman, an expert at all the feminine arts *and* all the masculine ones as well, brilliant, well-read, well-spoken in both English and GAELIC, fabulously wealthy, and on top of everything she's oh so modest about all her varied and impossible talents. In other words, she's by far the most blatant Mary Sue I have *ever*, *ever* read.

The secondary characters are just as bad. Colm MacHugh is a stereotypical Harlequin hero, strong, misunderstood, and ultimately superior to Lady/Princess Gabrielle in every way (but in order to do that Gabrielle has to turn into a brainless twit). Laird Alan Monroe is a typical stuck-up nobleman. The villains are one-dimensionally evil. The relationship between the hero and heroine - well, they're supposed to be lovers, but they turn out to have less romantic chemistry than Donny and Marie Osmond did as children.

The biggest problem, though, is the editing. A good editor should have caught the impossibilities in Gabrielle's back story. A good editor should have caught details such as the fact that (as a reviewer at another site mentioned) Gabrielle is called "Lady" in one place and "Princess" in the other, and the explanations she gives in each place contradict each other. A good editor should have caught the stock characters and anachronisms. Yet all of this goes by the wayside.

Shadow Music insulted my intelligence and my wallet. If Garwood wants to continue to write historicals, I suggest she pick up a few history books - and a better editor.

I don't recommend this book.
25 people found this helpful
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Shadow Music-A Joyfully Recommended Title!!

In an attempt to ease feuding between clans and keep the Highlanders on his side, King John has arranged for Princess Gabrielle of St. Biel to marry Laird Monroe. Baron Coswald and Baron Percy will be furious. They have coveted Gabrielle and believed John's lies as he played them against each other, convincing them they each had a chance to claim her for themselves.

Laird Owen MacKenna envies and hates Laird Colm MacHugh so he devises a plan to kill Colm's brother Liam. Gabrielle and her guards stumble upon the group of men MacKenna hired to kill Liam. Gabrielle saves him then brings him to safety. After Laird Monroe is mysteriously murdered, Gabrielle's fate hangs in the balance and Colm is forced to come to her defense.

A treasure is believed to be hidden in St. Biel and all those who have heard of it are consumed with finding it. Coswald and MacKenna are no different. Colm soon discovers a treasure as well, one much more valuable than gold.

Strong characters combined with a vivid and interesting storyline create a historical novel rich in romance and sensuality in Shadow Music. Colm's intensity and arrogance are irresistible. Gabrielle is beautiful, sweet and adventurous; they are perfect for each other. I love that some of my favorite characters from Ms. Garwood's previous novels either make an appearance or are mentioned in the story as well. Shadow Music is awonderful historical romance and no one writes them better than Julie Garwood!

Nannette
Reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed
24 people found this helpful
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Different opinion...

I almost didn't buy this book because of the bad reviews, and because I normally refuse to buy hardbacks, but I got a coupon so took the plunge, and I'm glad I did. I've loved her previous historicals, and I also like her contemporaries. I thought Shadow Music was perfectly enjoyable. I just spend a happy afternoon curled up reading it. The only complaint I have is that I would have preferred more interaction between Colm and Gabrielle but otherwise I thought it was very similar to her other Highlander historicals. I'm anxiously awaiting her next book.
18 people found this helpful
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Painful!

I hate to say it, but this was absolutely terrible. First, I need to address some of the reviewers who have given this 5 or 4 stars and are angry at the critics, saying that the unhappy fans can't deal with change, can't deal with an author needing to change styles after 20 years. I understand that authors and the publishing world change over time, but I still expect quality work! This is NOT quality work. I teach middle school English, and Shadow Music has the most basic, simple sentence structure, narration, and dialogue that I have ever seen in a novel written for adults. Incredibly weak writing. Page after page of choppy sentences. It was downright painful. The dialogue made me cringe. The word choice was the same. Simple, basic. The whole time I was reading, I was thinking of the lessons I just taught my pull-out group of 6th graders. I was giving them sentences about as simple as the ones in this novel and having them revise the weak sentences into complex, compoud, varied sentences! I kept thinking as I was reading, my struggling 6th graders are writing better sentences than these, and my superior 6th graders are writing circles around Julie Garwood.
You may think that I just don't "get" romance novels and/or Julie Garwood, and that's why I'm so harsh. Not true at all. I've been reading romance novels since I was 14, and I've read a lot of bad ones in my time. I've also bought and read all of Julie Garwood's books, have re-read the historicals many times, and have considered her to be one of my favorite authors.
I am extremely intrigued by many of the comments some reviewers made, speculating that Julie Garwood didn't even write this. I was thinking the exact same thing and even told my sister that. This is not her voice, her style, at all. At first, I was wondering if she was just really rushed and under a deadline, but it would still sound like her! Has she hired a ghost writer? The plot sounds like hers, so I can't help but wonder if she's passed her plots on to a ghost writer, which is what happened when V.C. Andrews died a number of years ago.
I liked the modern romance/suspense novels, like Mercy and Heartbreaker, but after those, each book was a bit more boring, and the quality of each book diminished, until the last few were pretty weak, plot-wise and quality-of-writing-wise (Noah's story was good, but the one before it was almost as bad as this one).
I don't know what has happened, but a great writer has fallen out of favor with this fan. I will still re-read her old novels, but I will not be buying the next unless the quality of writing has returned.
I'm sorry that this is so harsh. I respect writers. I could never write anything that would get published. I hope that my comments, and the comments of other enraged fans, will bring Julie Garwood back!
15 people found this helpful
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I'm crying as I type

I have been dreading writing this review, it just doesn't seem right to say anything negative about this author pertaining to her historicals. I own everything she has written, I even limit myself to re-reading the historicals so that I can pretend that I don't know them by heart. As for her new contemporary venture, well, I bought them all because I'm that faithful, but I've only read the first 3, and then prayed that she would just give it up.

Now here we all are, with all our expectations. Well, I read all the reviews so mine were very low, and still I am so sad. I could tell she wrote it, the story was interesting and full of intrigue. The problem is that the main characters, the "Romance" is as engrossing as the back of my cereal box! I have never been so bored and aloof while reading one of her romances. In fact everything else in the story was interesting, more so than when we get to our leading couple. It's impossible to even care much for Colm our "hero." He has no back story. We've come to expect her heroes to be the strong silent type, but Brodick's abruptness in Ransom was 100 times more endearing than this guy's persona. In fact they aren't abrupt and fearsome, they're riding around on they're hunts, chatting each other up on their feelings; it was just so out of character! When he interacts with our heroine, it's literally as interesting as a conversation about the weather, there is absolutely NO magic between these two, NO spark, NOthing! They didn't even meet till p. 160! There were so many characters to keep track of, which was okay if the main characters could have had a story of their own. I don't think her heart was in this, it was a convoluted mish mash of I don't even know what. I actually wanted to cry when I was done, (I am pregnant, but still). Like I said I read all the reviews and knew what I was getting, but I just had to see it for myself. Proceed with caution; it's all I can say at this point.
15 people found this helpful
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It kills me...

...to leave a bad review for Julie Garwood. She is one of my favorite romance writers because, although her stories are as preposterous as every other romance, she has amazing character interactions, hilarious scenes, great, evocative love scenes and always a healthy smattering of good suspense. But this book was lacking in all of those areas.

As others have pointed out, Colm and Gabrielle barely see each other. I can't figure out what attracts them to one another. In fact, Colm's brother spends more time with her, owes her his life, and seems like the perfect man for her. But we don't see why she likes Colm instead.

One of the biggest disappointments was the reference to beloved characters: Gillian, Ramsay, the Maitlands, and not even seeing them. Brodick was there but was completely out-of-character and rather boring.

At one point Brodick brings up how he met Gillian and the conversation implies something different than what everyone who has read 'Ransom' knows happened. It may have been too complex to fully reference it, but then it shouldn't have been brought up at all.

The love scene was perfunctory at best. Zero passion. Not like Garwood at all.

She had a great set-up and an outline of the basic plot would point to an amazing story by this usually excellent author. But the execution of this story was incredibly disappointing. I almost gave it 1 star, but I had to give it two for old time's sake. I'm a Garwood fan and I hope her next effort is up to her considerable talents.
13 people found this helpful
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I hate to leave this kind of review!!!!!!

OH wow!!! I have never been more disappointed in a book before. There was so much that went wrong with this story I don't know where to start. The interaction between Colm and Gabrielle was few and far between. There was no chemistry between the two of them at all. It seems as though the story mostly revolved around Baron Coswold and the injustices done to him. I swear there was one part in the book that came off so childish it's not funny I felt like throwing the book out the window. There were a lot of things left unfinished for me. I was hoping to get a glimpse of Gillian somewhere in this book and all we get is a wimpy Broderick that does not resemble himself from the previous books at all. I love all of her other books and the love that you see develop from the charachters. There was nothing to base any type of love on in this book just an obligation that one felt was owed. There was no clan interaction between the charachters either. Noone you would like to see have their own book. If you are hoping this is like the others you are bound to be disappointed. I really hope Garwood can get back to her A game because this book is far from it.
I hope this review was helpful.
12 people found this helpful