Woman in a Sheikh's World
Woman in a Sheikh's World book cover

Woman in a Sheikh's World

Mass Market Paperback – November 20, 2012

Price
$14.96
Publisher
Harlequin Presents
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0373131105
Dimensions
4.22 x 0.53 x 6.61 inches
Weight
4 ounces

Description

'Morgan's brilliant talent never ceases to amaze, and this time she whisks readers deep into the desert, in an emotional tale about second chances, fear and love'. 4.5* Top Pick RT Book Reviews',,,,,satisfied me on so many levels.' Vanessa, joyfullyreviewed.com'Sarah Morgan never fails to deliver.' The Good, The Bad, and The Unread Sarah Morgan is a USA Today and Sunday Times bestselling author of contemporary romance and women's fiction. She has sold more than 21 million copies of her books and her trademark humour and warmth have gained her fans across the globe. Sarah lives with her family near London, England, where the rain frequently keeps her trapped in her office. Visit her at www.sarahmorgan.com Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. She dreamed of the desert. She dreamed of dunes turning red gold under the burning fire of the sun and of the clear blue waters of the Persian Gulf lapping beaches of soft white sand. She dreamed of savage mountains and palm-shaded pools. And she dreamed of a Prince—a Prince with eyes all shades of the night and the power to command armies. 'Avery!' He was calling her name but she carried on walking without looking back. The ground crumbled beneath her feet and she was falling, falling… 'Avery, wake up!' She rose through clouds of sleep, the voice jarring with the image in her head. It was wrong. His voice was rich, deep and everything male. This voice was female and amused. 'Mmm?' The delicious aroma of fresh coffee teased her and she lifted her head and stared at the mug that had been placed next to her on the table. With a groan, she sat up and reached for it, half blind from sleep. 'What time is it?' 'Seven. You were moaning. That must have been some dream.' Avery pushed her hand through her hair and tried to wake herself up. She had the same dream every night. Thankfully when she woke it was to find herself in London, not the desert. The discordant blare of taxi horns announced the start of the morning rush hour. No mountains and no shaded oasis—just Jenny, her best friend and business partner, pressing the button on her desk to raise the blinds. Sunshine poured into the spectacular glass-clad office from all directions and Avery felt a sudden rush of relief to be awake and realise that the ground hadn't crumbled beneath her feet. She hadn't lost everything. This was hers and she'd built it from sheer hard work. 'I need to take a quick shower before our meeting.' 'When you ordered this couch for your office, I didn't realise the intention was to sleep on it.' Jenny put her coffee down on Avery's desk and slipped off her shoes. 'Just in case you don't actually know this, I feel it's my duty to point out that normal human beings go home at the end of the working day.' The disturbing dream clung to Avery's mind like a cobweb and she tried to brush it off, irritated by how much it could affect her. That wasn't her life. This was. Barefoot, she strolled across her office and took a look at her reality. Through the floor to ceiling windows, the city sparkled in the early morning sunshine, mist wrapping the River Thames in an ethereal cloak as delicate as a bride's veil. Familiar landmarks rose through the milky haze and down on the streets below tiny figures hurried along pavements and cars were already jammed together on the web of roads that criss-crossed beneath her office. Her eyes stung from lack of sleep but she was used to the feeling by now. It had been her close companion for months, along with the empty feeling in her chest that nothing could fill. Jenny was looking at her. 'Do you want to talk about it?' 'Nothing to talk about.' Avery turned away from the window and sat down at her desk. Work, she thought. Work had been everything until her world had been disturbed. She needed to get that feeling back. 'The good news is that in my extended insomnia moment last night I finished the proposal for the launch in Hong Kong. I've emailed it to you. I think I've excelled myself this time. Everyone is going to be talking about this party.' 'Everyone always talks about your parties.' The phone she'd left charging overnight buzzed. Back in business mode, Avery reached for it and then saw the name on the screen. Her hand froze in mid-air. Again? It was at least the fifth time he'd called. She couldn't do this now. Not so close to the dream. Her hand diverted and she switched on her computer instead, her heart thundering like a stampeding herd of wild horses. And layered under the panic was pain. Pain that he could intentionally hurt her like this. 'That's your private number. Why aren't you answering it?' Jenny peered at the screen of the phone and her head jerked up. 'Mal? The Prince is calling you?' 'Apparently.' Avery opened the spreadsheet she'd been working on and noticed with a flash of irritation that her hand wasn't quite steady. 'I should have changed my number.' He had no right to call her private line. She should have cut all ties. Should have made sure he wasn't able to call her except through the office. 'Over' should have meant just that except that he'd made sure that couldn't happen. 'All right, enough. I've ignored what's going on for too long.' Jenny plonked herself down in the chair opposite. 'I'm officially worried about you.' 'Don't be. I'm fine.' The words had been repeated so often they fell out of her mouth on their own. But they didn't convince Jenny. 'The man you loved is marrying another woman. How can you be fine? In your position I'd be screaming, sobbing, eating too much and drinking too much. You're not doing any of those things.' 'Because I didn't love him. We had an affair, that's all. An affair that ended. It happens to people all the time. Shall we get to work now?' 'It was so much more than an affair, Avery. You were in love.' 'Good sex doesn't have to mean love; I don't know why people always think that.' Did she sound calm? Did she sound as if she didn't care? Would anyone guess that the numbers on her screen were nonsense? She knew that people were watching her, wondering how she was reacting as the wedding of the Crown Prince drew closer. There were times when she felt like an exhibit in a zoo. It seemed that the whole world was waiting for her to drop to her knees and start sobbing. And that, she thought, was a shame for them because they were going to be waiting a long time. She'd throw out her stilettos before she'd sob over a man. Especially a man like Mal, who would take such a display of weakness as a sign of another successful conquest. His ego didn't need the boost. The ringing stopped and then immediately the phone on her desk rang. Jenny looked at the phone as if it were an enraged scorpion. 'Do you want me to—?' 'No.' 'He's very insistent.' 'He's a Prince—' Avery muted her phone '—he can't help insisting. Mal only has two settings, Prince and General. Either way, he's commanding someone.' No wonder they'd clashed, she thought numbly. No relationship could have two bosses. There was an urgent tap on the door and Chloe, the new receptionist, virtually fell into the room in her excitement. 'Avery, you'll never guess who is on the phone!' She paused for dramatic effect. 'The Crown Prince of Zubran.' Clearly she expected her announcement to have more impact than it did and when neither of them reacted she repeated herself. 'Did you hear me? The Crown Prince of Zubran! I tried to put him through but you weren't picking up.' 'Insistent and persistent,' Jenny murmured. 'You're going to have to answer it.' 'Not right now. Chloe, please tell him I'm unavailable.' 'But it's the Prince himself. Not his assistant or his adviser or anything, but him. In person. Complete with melting dark voice and a very cultured accent.' 'Give him my sincere apologies. Tell him I'll call back as soon as I can.' As soon as she'd worked out her strategy. As soon as she was confident she wasn't going to say, or do, something she'd later regret. A conversation like that had to be carefully planned. Chloe gaped at her. 'You sound so relaxed, like it's normal to have someone like him just calling on the phone. I can't believe you know him. I'd be dropping his name into every conversation. He is so gorgeous,' she confessed in a breathy voice. 'Not just in the obvious way, although I wouldn't object if he wanted to take his shirt off and chop wood in front of me or something, but because he's just such a man if you know what I mean. He's tough in a way men aren't allowed to be any more because it's not considered politically correct. You just know he is not the sort to ask permission before he kisses you.' Avery looked at their newly appointed receptionist and realised with surprise that the girl didn't know. Chloe was one of the few people not to know that Avery Scott had once had a wild and very public affair with Crown Prince Malik of Zubran. She thought about the first time he'd kissed her. No, he hadn't asked permission. The Prince didn't ask permission for anything. For a while she'd found it exhilarating to be with a man who wasn't intimidated by her confidence and success. Then she'd realised that two such strong people in a relationship was a recipe for disaster. The Prince thought he knew what was best for everyone. Including her. Jenny tapped her foot impatiently. 'Chloe, go to the bathroom and stick your head under cold running water. If that doesn't work, try your whole body. Whatever it takes because the Prince is not going to be kissing you any time soon, with or without permission, so you can forget that. Now go and talk to him before he assumes you've passed out or died.' Chloe looked confused. 'But what if it's something really urgent that can't wait? You are arranging his wedding.' Wedding. The word sliced into Avery like a blade through soft flesh, the pain taking her by surprise. 'I'm not arranging his wedding.' The words almost choked her and she didn't understand why. She'd ended their relationship. Her choice. Her decision, freely made. So why did she feel pain that he was marrying another woman? In every way, it was the best possible outcome. 'I'm arranging the evening party and ... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • With a client list hotter than the Zubran desert, wedding planner Avery Scott shouldn't be surprised that her latest client is Crown Prince Malik of Zubran—the man who once lit her body on fire…before steamrollering over her heart.
  • Determined to ignore Malik's lethal charm, Avery makes a very personal not-to-do list:1. Not being Malik's intended, our relationship
  • must
  • remain 100 percent professional.2. His arranged bride might have run away, but I mustn't distract him—for the kings of Zubran, duty
  • always
  • comes first.3. However luxurious the Bedouin tent—and smoldering the tension—pride dictates the touch I crave stays strictly forbidden.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(152)
★★★★
25%
(127)
★★★
15%
(76)
★★
7%
(35)
23%
(116)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Debbie Downer h sucks the oxygen from the romance.

Take this review with a big grain of salt and a huge dose of It's me, not you!, but the heroine is such a Debbie Downer I could hardly stay focused enough to finish it.

Let's talk about what was good. The banter between the heroine and any character other than hero is awesome and scintillating. When the hero enters I really disliked him for various reasons and then back story was revealed and he becomes one of the better heroes in Harlequin-land.

The heroine, oh dear, another po-faced, I'm-going-out-into-the-garden-and-eat-worms heroine that has no hope of happiness because of the head trip her heinous mother did on her. I really wanted a confrontation between the H and the mother. Forget the heroine, I doubt she could emerge from the little cloud of doom she's encased her in. She whines about the fact the hero has moved on to a MOC only after she dumped him because he wanted to marry her and didn't get the proposal right. How dare he as she needs to be an independent woman and she'll never be happy and it's only a matter of time until they...Shoot me now. Better yet, her. It's not that bald and simple, but that's what I came away with because I'm feeling cranky over her inability to get an effing grip.

This was not for me although I loved the relationship she had with her partner and the snappy dialogue.

If she has this hard of time just marrying someone she's bonkers for I can't imagine the Prozac she'll be scarfing down if she ever gets pregnant.
2 people found this helpful
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Super annoyed!

The book had a good story but i cannot really confirm because i stopped at chapter6. The heroine was too annoying! I was like 'shut your mouth!' She was always provoking the hero and it was just mean how she talked to him and she was in denial. I know she has history but ive never encountered a character like her. I really tried, i wanted too give her a chance but she talks too much! And when she opens her mouth you just know that nothing nice will come out of her it. I liked her from the last book but i never knew she would be like this. Btw this is the very first time that i have written a review not when im happy about the book and not even when i dint like it. I always try to finish a book. But for me to write this review..i am that pissed! It had promise but it failed for me. Sorry to those who liked the book. Maybe it was just me....
2 people found this helpful
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Woman in a Sheikh's World is a Joyfully Recommended Title

Party planner, Avery Scott, and Crown Prince Malik had been together for a year, but when he pushed for a permanent relationship, she hit the road. Avery wasn't about to sacrifice her independence for anyone or anything. It's not the life she knows. However, her pride won't let her refuse planning the after party of Malik and his new bride-to-be!

Malik truly believes that Avery is over him, and he now must marry for duty's sake. He was reeling from their split, but he doesn't show it. Instead, he looks for just a little something to show that Avery felt more for him that he thought. But, of course, Avery never acts like a typical woman, and they both find they must learn to face their fears in order to achieve their desires.

Woman in a Sheikh's World was a surprisingly packed romantic novel. I had so many emotions engaged in this story that by the end of it, I was feeling down right wonderful! Woman in a Sheikh's World had a very strong, independent heroine in Avery coming up against a man that could be very alpha with other people, yet wasn't so much with her. Malik showed a different side to Avery because she taught him how to treat her, and she wasn't very good at showing that other side of herself.

Woman in a Sheikh's World showed that Avery likes to be in control, and it's very hard for her to cede that over and trust someone else with herself. It also revealed that Malik was the perfect man for Avery in every way because he cared enough to travel that path with her despite the obstacles that were tossed in his way. There were a few laugh-out-loud moments in Woman in a Sheikh's World, and they helped to lighten the mood of this tale. I liked that both their perspectives in Woman in a Sheikh's World were shown to vary greatly depending upon their backgrounds....their pasts and what they had been through before arriving at their merging paths. Both Malik and Avery made snap judgments in Woman in a Sheikh's World without knowing the facts or the other's side of things; they just interpreted things. I loved that Avery learned who she could depend upon to have a fuller life and who she needed to toss in the drink, too! I also enjoyed that the characters' eyes were opened in Woman in a Sheikh's World showing that some things are more gratifying than being completely dependent upon oneself and, realizing that, of course, there are mistakes made that everything isn't perfect, but are you going to just toss it in as worthless or fight to see it through? Woman in a Sheikh's World just satisfied me on so many levels and showed that it's not always rainbows and butterflies, it's compromise....it's realistic, and it's Joyfully Recommended!

Vanessa for Joyfully Reviewed
1 people found this helpful
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Another Sarah Morgan Winner

I adore Sarah Morgan's 2nd chance stories and I was so excited to read Woman in a Sheikh's World after the introduction of Avery and Mal in A Night of No Return.

We discover that Party Planner Avery is in charge of Crown Prince Malik's wedding... only problem is Avery and Mal are past lovers who went their separate ways but stubborn Avery is determined not to show Mal how he still affects her and agrees to take care of the party... But the icing hits the fan when Mal comes to Avery asking if she knows where his bride is... she's run away! Both Avery and Mal embark on two day race thru the desert looking for Mal's missing bride before the kingdom of Zurban or worse still, the brides father, discovers she's missing. The bride is not the only thing Avery and Mal discover.

I loved the story. Mal is one of the hottest sheikh's I've read about, stubborn as anything tho but he meets his match with Avery, the witty, brave and stubborn party planner. She certainly had a lot more grace than I could have in the same situation but we all know good things come to those who wait.

For those of you who have a cold Christmas, I recommend this hot desert story for you to keep you warm :))
1 people found this helpful
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Fantastic Read

To have a relationship, you have to have two people who open up to each other and at least meet each other half way in revealing their inner fears, right? Without trust, how can something like love grow? Those are some basic questions that both Avery and Malik have to wade through before they can move forward.

Interestingly enough, I `met' Avery in one of Ms. Morgan's previous books and based upon a few comments that were made in that story, it was inevitable that I'd eventually see Avery as the main heroine at some point. This is her turn in the spotlight and wow, what a powerhouse of a lady. She's driven, focused, has amazing determination and business savvy and plays her cards so close to her chest, she never reveals even the tiniest hint that's she is not in charge at all times. Doesn't she sound uptight? I mean, she's successful in the book, but it's come at a cost. And for a person, man or woman, to be that controlling, doesn't that trigger some questions? As an avid reader of romance, I knew that the heroine was hiding behind that control. What I couldn't have guessed in a hundred years was the secret.

Malik, or as Avery and close friends call him, Mal, was another controlled and dominate character. At first I saw him as Avery saw him - a man who didn't love, who kept women at arm's length and who was so not into her that as soon as they separated, became engaged to another woman. I was not a fan of Mal. That is until the author lets readers into his head. Until at one point Mal does open up to the heroine and what gets revealed is an amazing and heart wrenching picture of what it is to be Prince Malik. At that moment, and a credit to the author's writing, I was very sympathetic to his character. In fact I felt bad for him. And for Avery. They have an incredible amount of emotional baggage, they're both hurting and they both need the strengths found in each other to heal.

What I found most intriguing was Avery's eventual secret. A few comments that she made during her internal dialogue gave me hints that I put together about what it might be. It turns out that I was right. It was interesting but on the other hand, I am unsure whether or not such a situation would be that much of a stumbling block to love. I can see the stress that it might cause, but the massive amount of importance that Avery attached to it seemed overwrought. Then there was her mother. For a character that was never on stage, she sure was a bizarre nutcase with some serious hang-ups and phobias. Descriptions alone had my hackles rising in defense of Avery. And that text was so cold! It's not a wonder the heroine had some serious relationship issues.

My favorite part is when Malik has his "Aha!" moment. When he finally got to see a crack in Avery's armor and realized a very important fact previously missed is when the momentum of the plot picked up speed and it got really interesting. Before that, I was just as frustrated as the two of them.

This story is solely focused on two people who were hurt once before and being able to get a second chance at love. It comes about in a most unlikely and twisted manner and I sort of found it funny. It seemed to me, once I'd read it, that they both really wanted the second chance but simply could not find a way to make it happen. They were too stubborn, boneheaded and hurt. And yet as oddball as it was, they eventually rationalized how much perfect sense it made, and henceforth drove each other nuts with smoldering looks, passionate remembrances and yearnings that drove their libidos up the wall. It definitely made for interesting reading. Ms. Morgan really put her characters through an emotional wringer in this one.

Even though her role is a small one, my absolute favorite secondary character is Chloe. She completely cracked me up. And what she does at the end gave me the giggles. What a cutie.

Woman in a Sheikh's World takes readers on an exotic adventure filled with passion between two personalities with enough charisma and conflicts to make Clash of the Titans seem tame. Two strong people who have too many secrets, who fear revealing them enough that they almost let the best thing that could ever happen to them slip away. But for once, Mal's stubbornness and ability to focus on the end goal finally has a clear path and nothing is going to stand in his way, even if that stumbling block is Avery herself. It's a well written romance with a happily ever after that satisfies while educating me on why doves are better than swans. Pick up your own copy of Woman in a Sheikh's World and experience the journey for yourself.

Originally posted at LAS Romance Reviews