Showing posts with label Millworth Manor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Millworth Manor. Show all posts

Sunday, December 13, 2015

The Daring Exploits of a Runaway Heiress - Victoria Alexander (Zebra - May 2015)

Series: Millworth Manor (Book 5)

To Do:
Swim naked in the moonlight
Play in a high stakes card game
Ride an elephant
Be painted sans clothing.
Take a lover. . .

Lucy Merryweather has inherited a fortune--and her great-aunt's list of unfulfilled wishes. What better way to honor her memory than by accomplishing as many of them as possible? And with Lucy's family an ocean away in New York, nothing stands in her way--if one ignores the private investigator hired to spy on her.

Yet Cameron Effington is infuriatingly difficult to ignore. . .

As a reporter, Cameron is always looking for a good story. An American heiress running rampant between Millworth Manor and Mayfair is the perfect subject. Not to mention captivating. And extremely kissable. And if Lucy believes he's a detective? Well, the truth should never get in the way of a good story--or hinder delicious, impetuous passion. . .

Fun book. Lucy made her first appearance in The Shocking Secret of a Guest at the Wedding, as the non-fiancee of the hero Jackson. I really liked her there and looked forward to reading her story. When the book begins, her family has gone back to New York, leaving her in the care of Jackson's mother. What her mother doesn't know is that all the people who are supposedly in charge of Lucy have gone off on their own business, leaving Lucy very happily on her own. Jackson makes a last ditch effort to protect her reputation by insisting she hire a companion before he too goes off on his own adventures.

Lucy has spent her life living up to everyone else's expectations. Now that she has her own money and is away from everyone else, she has plans of her own. She is going through her great-aunt's list of regrets and plans to do them herself, and she doesn't plan to let anyone or anything stop her. I loved her conversation with her newly hired companion and the agreement they came to. I loved Lucy's determination and her confidence that she would succeed. I did think she was a little naive about some of the risks. In spite of that, she was also really intelligent, and I loved some of her methods of accomplishing her goals.

Cameron is the youngest son of the Effington family and has been searching for his own place in the world. He finally found it in working as a reporter for one of the lesser London newspapers. His father isn't too happy with his work and challenges him to take the next step. The scene at the family dinner table is pretty amusing, especially considering the straightlaced marquess is the same man in Let It Be Love, and his own story is anything but proper. Cameron takes his father's challenge, but is at a loss as to how to meet it, until he hears about the American woman and her plans. He figures he will follow he around and use her for inspiration for a series of fictional stories. However, things don't go quite as he planned.

I loved their first meeting, as Lucy spots the strange man who has been following her and calls him out - after he comes to her rescue. She jumps to conclusions about who he is and he doesn't correct her, figuring it doesn't really matter. I loved seeing her talk him into helping her with her quest, and how he agrees for his own purposes. Over the next few weeks they grow closer. Cameron becomes more and more intrigued, fascinated and attracted to the young woman who is so different than anyone else he has ever known. Lucy is equally fascinated and attracted, though she is also somewhat wary. In spite of what she feels, she's certain that he is hiding something from her, and she doesn't want to give her heart where there is a lack of trust.

As their adventures went on Cameron became more aware of the fact that the secrets he was keeping were liable to cause trouble once they were revealed. He knew he had to tell her, but he kept putting it off, afraid of her reaction. And the longer he waited, the harder it got, because the deeper he fell. Lucy was falling for him too, but her worries over what he was hiding kept growing. When she found out one part of his deception she was at first angry, then hurt. She kept waiting for him to confess, even as she gave him several golden opportunities. When the final confrontation came, both of them made mistakes that had me wanting to shake them both. Then pride kept them apart when they should have worked harder to listen to each other. I loved Cameron's reappearance and his methods for winning Lucy back. They were unorthodox, but because it was Lucy, they worked. I loved his big moment at the end.

As usual in a Victoria Alexander book, there were quite a few laugh out loud moments. I loved Lucy's various adventures, from riding the elephant to her invasion of the gentleman's club. There were also some great scenes with Cameron and his brothers, and their opinions of what he was doing, not to mention his conversation with Lucy's four brothers at the end. I hope to see books for Cameron's brothers and Lucy's in the future.

Saturday, April 18, 2015

The Shocking Secret of a Guest at the Wedding - Victoria Alexander (Zebra - Nov 2014)

Series: Millworth Manor (Book 4)

The bride and groom cordially request your presence for a wedding at Millworth Manor. . .

Guests will include Jackson Quincy Graham Channing, New York City banker, and Lady Theodosia "Teddy" Winslow, wedding planner to the finest families in England.

Introductions shall be followed by light conversation, dancing, flirtation, arguing, reconciliation, and an impulsive kiss that both parties are quite certain they will never repeat.

Until they do.

A mutually beneficial fake engagement will be accompanied by all manner of very real complications, scandalous revelations, nefarious schemes, and one inescapable conclusion:

That true love--unlike the perfect wedding--is impossible to plan. . .

As is usually the case with a Victoria Alexander book, this was a fun story. Jackson and Teddy are very different people, but those differences balance each other well, if they will just allow it to happen.

Jackson has grown up in New York City with his mother and grandfather. He has become vice president of the family bank and is set to announce his engagement to the young lady who he has grown up with. He is content with his life. All that changes when his father shows up at his family home. Jack always thought his father was dead. His mother certainly hadn't told him otherwise. Not only is he alive, Jack's father hadn't known that Jack existed. Jack is equally stunned to discover that on his father's side of the family, he is the heir to a title and estate in England. Now he feels that his entire life has been a lie and he isn't sure who he is anymore. He does know that he wants to get to know his father, so he leaves his New York life behind and heads to England. He and Lucy have decided that their potential engagement will not occur as they are better friends than potential mates.

Teddy and her mother are good friends to the Channing family. Since the death of Teddy's father, they have made their way as the Victorian version of event planners. Teddy is running the wedding of Camille Channing when she meets a handsome and mysterious guest at the reception. Though they haven't been introduced, he asks her to dance. There is some heavy duty flirting going on between them, ending with a kiss that curls her toes, and still no idea who he is.

Finding out who he is pushes some buttons of Teddy's, who feels as though he lied to her by omission. She had been engaged to a man who through his lies had ended up being the ruin of her family, before he died. She knows she's overreacting, but can't seem to help it. Meanwhile, Jack felt like he and Teddy had made a real connection and he wants to pursue it.

I loved seeing Jack change from the sober banker in New York to the man who is pursuing the things he wants instead of what is expected of him. Being exposed to the somewhat zany Channing family gives him the motivation to transform who he is. It turns out that he has quite a sense of humor and no problem using it with Teddy. He also discovers that he has a bit of a protective streak when it comes to her, and steps in to rescue her from an unwanted proposal by claiming her for himself.

Teddy is very independent, and for the last several years has been using their event planning to pay off her father's debts. She has decided that marriage isn't for her, though she has yet to get that point across to her mother. She intends to take their "hobby" of event planning and turn it into an actual business. She feels a need to prove to herself that she can stand on her own feet and not depend on a man to take care of her.

The "engagement" between Jack and Teddy starts out as something that will give her time to get her plans in order, and give Jack time to make up his mind what he wants to do with his future. By spending time together, Teddy helps Jack get acclimated to English society. He discovers that the dreams he had when he was younger are still alive, and that now he has the opportunity to make them happen. He also wants Teddy to be part of that future, but he has to convince her. 

Teddy is one very stubborn woman. She has her goal in her sights and nothing is going to distract her from it. The time she spends with Jack makes her realize that what she had felt for her former fiance was not truly love. But she's afraid that giving in to her feelings for Jack will cause her to lose the person she is finally becoming, so she continues to push him away. Walking away from everything he offers her tears her apart, but she feels it is necessary. I wanted to shake her for hurting Jack like that, but she does come through in the end, and both are stronger for the separation. I enjoyed seeing her chase him down and then have to do a bit of grovelling.

There is a bit of intrigue/conflict when part of Teddy's past rears its ugly head. Once again, her stubborn independence has her trying to deal with it on her own, but fortunately her friend Dee steps in a rats her out to Jack. Once again he gets to play the part of hero, but also shows his banker's abilities while doing it. I loved seeing Teddy's fascination with this side of Jack. Naturally, all ends up as it should.

As always in one of Victoria Alexander's books, the interactions among characters are fun. I loved Lucy, Jack's non-fiancee. Her snarky little comments during Jack's father's reappearance were really funny and to the point. She seems to have a much clearer picture of their relationship than Jack does, at least until he gets some distance between them. Her appearance again later in the book is just as much fun. I'm really looking forward to her story. I really enjoyed seeing the various members of the Channing family again. Their immediate acceptance of Jack was great, and their comments on how his appearance is just typical for their family made him feel a little better. His cousins' husbands have a great scene where they try to explain women, especially their women, to Jack. Of course, some of the best ones occur between Jack and Teddy. I loved seeing him call her on her attitude toward him, especially at the beginning. He loves her spirit and isn't shy about telling her so. I also liked seeing Teddy give Jack the occasional kick when he lets his insecurities get the better of him. I especially liked her bit when she saw him at the Explorer's Club. She does occasionally get wound up, and Jack has a unique way of calming her down.