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His Wicked Reputation: Wicked Trilogy, by Madeline Hunter

His Wicked Reputation: Wicked Trilogy, by Madeline Hunter

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His Wicked Reputation: Wicked Trilogy, by Madeline Hunter

His Wicked Reputation: Wicked Trilogy, by Madeline Hunter



His Wicked Reputation: Wicked Trilogy, by Madeline Hunter

Download PDF Ebook Online His Wicked Reputation: Wicked Trilogy, by Madeline Hunter

From the New York Times bestselling Madeline Hunter comes this first in a stunning new trilogy about three irresistibly attractive brothers.  This is the story of the bastard brother.... For fans of Mary Balogh and Amanda Quick. Gareth Fitzallen is celebrated for four things: his handsome face, his notable charm, his aristocratic connections, and an ability to give the kind of pleasure that has women begging for more. Normally he bestows his talents on experienced, worldly women. But when he heads to Langdon’s End to restore a property he inherited—and to investigate a massive art theft—he lays plans to seduce a most unlikely lady. Eva Russell lives a spinster’s life of precarious finances and limited dreams while clinging to her family’s old gentry status. She supports herself by copying paintings while she plots to marry her lovely sister to a well-established man. Everyone warns her of Gareth’s reputation, and advises her to lock her sister away. Only it is not her sister Gareth desires. One look, and she knows he is trouble. One kiss, however, proves she is no match for this master of seduction.

His Wicked Reputation: Wicked Trilogy, by Madeline Hunter

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #32250 in Books
  • Brand: Hunter
  • Published on: 2015-03-03
  • Released on: 2015-03-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.75" h x 1.12" w x 4.17" l, 1.20 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 432 pages
His Wicked Reputation: Wicked Trilogy, by Madeline Hunter

Review

Praise for His Wicked Reputation“Hunter…spins the intrigues of an enterprising bastard son and a resourceful artist to delightful effect in this excellent launch of the Wicked series of Regency romances. Gareth Fitzallen, illegitimate son of the Duke of Aylesbury, has two skills: brokering art deals and pleasing women in bed. When his poisonous half-brother dies, Gareth takes possession of his disputed inheritance, a near-ruined manor house. He is also tasked with solving the mystery of a missing art cache, an invaluable collection hidden in case of Napoleon’s invasion that has vanished without trace. Impoverished spinster Eva Russell supports herself and her sister, Rebecca, by painting and selling copies of the Gainsboroughs she’s found in the attic of Gareth’s house. After an inauspicious first encounter, Gareth and Eva become unlikely friends and lovers, but Gareth’s pursuit of the stolen masterpieces may endanger Eva and destroy their chance at happiness. The period detail educates without being onerous. Characters, such as the eccentric sisters who befriend Eva and Rebecca, round out an entertaining cast, and the romance and suspense are balanced perfectly.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)"Hunter’s PhD in art history stands her in good stead in this fascinating, danger-tinged novel, the first in a new trilogy. With her usual aplomb, Hunter seamlessly marries seductive wit with smoldering sensuality in her latest impeccably written Regency romance."—Booklist"Plot and passion come together to make this a sexy, compelling story." --BookPagePraise for The Accidental Duchess"A rash, adventure-seeking heroine and an honorable, take-charge hero clash splendidly as passions blaze in this complex story that pairs another marvelously singular couple, brings the bad guys to justice, and cleverly ties up the loose ends...—to the delight of all concerned."—Library Journal  "Fueled by an abundance of subtle wit and potent sensuality, The Accidental Duchess...is another exquisitely crafted love story by one of the romance genre’s masters."—Booklist Praise for the previous novels of Madeline Hunter"Another stellar Regency-set historical romance that hits all the literary marks. Hunter’s effortlessly elegant writing exudes a wicked sense of wit; her characterization is superbly subtle, and the sexual chemistry she cooks up between her deliciously independent heroine and delightfully sexy hero is pure passion."—Booklist (starred review)"Intelligent and memorable...As smart and sharp as the best of Regency romances can be.  With its tangy dialogue, Pride and Prejudice themes, bits of mystery and nefarious characters, readers may be reminded of Jane Austen."—Romantic Times (Top Pick)“Hunter’s books are so addictive.”—Publishers Weekly“Hunter's flowery centerpiece will suit every romance table. Highly recommended.”—Library Journal

About the Author Madeline Hunter is a two-time RITA award winner and seven-time finalist, and has twenty-five nationally bestselling historical romances in print, including The Accidental Duchess, The Counterfeit Mistress, and The Conquest of Lady Cassandra. A member of RWA’s Honor Roll, her books have been on the bestseller lists of the New York Times, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly. More than six million copies of her books are in print and her novels have been translated into thirteen languages. Madeline is a regular contributor on USA Today’s Happily Ever After blog with her Romance Unlaced column. She has a PhD in art history, which she teaches at the university level.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

CHAPTER 1

It was well past noon when the maid delivered the breakfast tray to Hendrika’s opulent bedroom. Gareth Fitzallen finished reading the final drafts of a complicated business contract while the servant threw back the curtains and opened the window.

Hendrika purred, stretched, and rubbed her eyes. Gareth collected the vellum sheets he had spread over her body, the better to keep them organized. The maid plumped up an assortment of pillows. Hendrika sat up and rested her back against them, exposing her lush, naked body to the maid, to Gareth, and possibly to the family who owned the tall, narrow house across the canal.

“Do you require anything else?” the maid asked. Her downcast eyes still allowed a gaze that rested on Gareth’s bare chest. She glanced up into his eyes for a second through her lashes. Her nostrils flared. The maid was becoming a problem. He did nothing to encourage her, but inevitably Hendrika would see one of the sly smiles or hot looks sent his way.

Hendrika shooed the woman away, then poured coffee into the two cups. “What are all these documents?”

“The shipment to England from Honfleur. We have finalized the terms of the sale. The count’s factor and I need only sign. And you, too, of course.”

Although fair like many of the residents of Amsterdam, Hendrika’s eyes could grow very dark when she became thoughtful. They turned black now. “You are sure your brother the duke will guarantee your payment? Elbert would turn over in his grave if he knew I took this cargo from one foreign port to another on credit alone.”

He set down his coffee on the tray, gently brushed a long lock of her curly blond hair aside, and bent to plant a distracting kiss on the full globe of her breast. “Of all that we have shared this last month, I suspect your late husband would find our partnership in this shipment the least of it.”

Strong fingers stretched through his hair, then held his head in place, encouraging him to distress Elbert’s ghost all the more. She squirmed, almost upsetting the tray, and giggled in the guttural way she had. Then she pushed him away and returned to her breakfast, her breasts now heavy and hard and their tips protuberant. She buttered some bread. “Which jam do you want?”

“Cherry.”

Two newspapers had come up with the tray. She took the Dutch one and gave him the one out of Paris. He munched his bread while reading the French political news.

Suddenly a grip closed on his arm. Hendrika exclaimed something in Dutch.

“Gareth, my love,” she whispered after taking a deep breath. “Look at this here. Can you read it? Should I translate?”

He took the paper. She stroked his arm while he read the short notice she indicated. Five words in he barely noticed her there.

“Zeus.” His own breath caught and held before he exhaled.

His half brother Percival, the fourth Duke of Aylesbury, was dead. He had died more than a week earlier. Suddenly. Abruptly. Unexpectedly.

“This is shocking. He was not a sickly man. Far from it. Young still, too. Only thirty-three.”

“What is meant, the inquiry is open?” she asked softly.

“It is just a formality. I must go back, of course. Immediately. I need to help the others, and—”

“Of course. Of course,” she cooed sympathetically.

He turned the paper’s sheets until he found the schedule of packets from Amsterdam to London. Cutlery and china clinked while Hendrika returned to her meal. He set the paper aside on top of the stack of vellum.

“We will need to sign these contracts today, now.” He gestured to them. “I will send a message to the lawyers and arrange a meeting.”

She examined her bread while she slathered jam on it. “With your brother dead, is that wise? His name swayed the count to extend credit to you. It swayed me too. That and other things.”

He stretched out beside her and helped himself to a bite from her bread. “There is now another half brother who is the duke, one who loves me even more. God forbid he drops dead as well; there is yet another in line. We never run out of them. Nothing has changed.” He gave her a reassuring kiss.

She made the kiss a long one, then looked into his eyes. “But you will leave now, and I do not think you will be back. So I must ensure I am paid one way or another.”

She dipped her short, blunt knife into one of the little blue and white pots, then smeared the garnet jam around her breast. “Cherry, I think you said you prefer this morning.” She took the pot in one hand, and the knife in the other, and gestured for him to remove the tray. Carefully, slowly, she drew circles of jam around her other breast, dabbed two large globs on her nipples, then painted streaks down her body.

“Here, too, I think.” She spread her plump thighs, and painted lower yet. “Oh, yes, and here. You must be your wicked best this morning, so I do not worry about your credit today.”

He let her finish as she wanted. Then he braced himself above her and began licking the jam, so she would think about nothing at all for a very long time.

CHAPTER 2

Eva hitched her clumsy bundle higher under her arm. A snapping breeze threatened to unveil the object shrouded in old burlap. She stopped to tuck the coarse fabric closer all around the heavily sculpted plaster frame. When she had chosen this painting, she had failed to consider how hard it would be to hide and carry it.

While she fussed with her burden, she kept one eye on a figure moving on the road. Another stranger. With nearby Birmingham’s growth, and with all the people displaced by the failed harvests, strangers moving through the countryside hardly merited note. Yet this one raised a tiny alarm, for reasons she could not name. Maybe he moved too slowly for a man with someplace to go. In fact, it looked as if he had actually slowed so he would not pass the house’s drive before she reached its end.

This was not the first time she found herself wondering about a stranger. Last week there had been another one, this time in town. Only she was sure she also saw him later, on the lane near her house.

She scolded herself for inventing ghosts. Her current mission made her nervous, that was all. She should not have this painting, and guilt made her overcautious.

She walked on. She glanced back at the house she had just left as she approached the point where its drive met the road. Years ago, before half the trees lining this private lane died, most likely one could not see much besides chimneys from this spot. Now the derelict condition of the building was visible to all. More a large hunting lodge than a proper manor house, it consisted of stone wings attached to a rustic Tudor core. Thirty years ago it might have been considered haphazard in design. Now the tastemakers would think it charming.

Each time she visited, more damage could be seen. Today a whole section of garden wall had vanished, its stones no doubt pilfered to build some outbuilding on one of the nicer properties of Langdon’s End. She expected to round the bend in the road one day and discover nothing more than a heap of rock.

She turned onto the road, fussing with the stupid frame, trying not to keep looking back at the man now walking behind her. Suddenly she heard something that froze her fingers. A horse approached. From the sound of its hooves, it was galloping toward her and nearing the bend in the road ahead that would bring her into view.

She quickly examined her burden to make sure nothing showed, then walked forward with long strides, hoping she appeared to be a woman going about her day’s perfectly honest, completely legal, not the least untoward business. In seconds a huge black horse, its head strained against its reins and its teeth bared like a stallion out of hell, bore down on her. Hooves clamoring, breath snorting, that devil head grew larger fast.

It passed that point where its rider should have slowed upon seeing someone on the road. It just kept coming. Alarmed, she jumped aside to make way, damning the rogue who had carelessly risked her life to his whim. At that the horse reared up. Its front hooves pawed the air, and the beast let out a long, furious whinny.

Cool moisture gathered around her feet and ankles. She looked down to see she had stepped right into a deep puddle. She cursed again. Her shoes would probably be ruined.

“My sincere apologies.” The voice came from on high while she lifted one foot to determine the damage. Soaked. Ruined for sure.

“It is a little late for courtesy,” she snapped. She concentrated on placing her feet in such a way as to exit the puddle without stepping in it yet again. The burden she carried did not make it any easier. She could barely see over it. Perhaps if she lifted it above her head . . .

“The house distracted me. I know coming upon you so fast was inexcusable, but it appeared no one was about.”

“If you had been watching the road, you would know it appeared no such way.” She looked behind her to point to the other person on the road. Only he was gone. Perhaps he took a shortcut through the woods.

Her skirt proved too narrow for the long strides she needed. She had no choice except to slosh through the puddle to its edge.

A hand jutted in front of her face, grabbing for the painting. “Allow me to relieve you of this so you do not drop it.”

She smacked the hand away and made her way to dry grass.

The horse panted and quivered, probably deciding whether to take a bite out of her. She looked up its considerable flank and the long legs and handsome boots that gripped it. She looked higher, up the dashing garnet riding coat to the casually tied cravat. Finally her gaze rose to the face of the man who had addressed her.

Her fury momentarily left her. It lasted no longer than a three-count, she was sure, but in that tiny pause, not only her anger ceased. Her breath did, too, and the movement of the leaves in the breeze, and perhaps even the revolution of the earth.

The rider was beautiful. No other word would do. Handsome would be too vague a description. Attractive would be inadequate. Thick black hair, dark eyes, and eyebrows that arched perfectly, all graced features both regular and precise. The only flaw, a rather wide mouth, could hardly be called a disadvantage, seeing as how it gave the man both expressive possibilities and an undeniable sensual quality.

Then again, he did not need the mouth for that. His air and manner, the very way he sat on that horse, announced he would be nothing but trouble for a woman. Of course, most women would find him too delicious to resist. She suspected he knew that. How could he not when fools like she stared gape-mouthed upon seeing him?

Those dark eyes scrutinized her as surely as she did him, only with much more amusement than she experienced in her own study. He had probably noticed that three count. She doubted he found it a novel reaction to himself.

“I have ruined your shoes. I insist that I pay for another pair.”

It had been his fault and he should pay, but she reacted badly to the offer. She resented that he noticed she could ill afford the loss of the shoes. She hated that he sought to subject her to his charity.

“The only payment I ask is that you not gallop that horse on this road while you are admiring architecture. You are too easily impressed by the latter, if that house distracted you.”

He turned to look at the house. “I think it handsome.”

She rearranged her bundle in her arms. “On the outside, perhaps it would appeal to those who favor sentimentality over sophistication. Inside it is derelict, however. No one has lived there in my memory, and its owner does not maintain it. It is a haven for vagrants and thieves, and the people of the local town would be glad if it burned down. Perhaps one day it will.” She hoped not. That house had been very useful to her the last five years.

Hitching up her painting again, she began walking down the road. She heard the horse move. Then she felt its breath on her shoulder. She started, and almost jumped aside again.

“Won’t you allow me to help you carry that? Or better yet, give you a ride to where you are going? It looks to be a heavy package, and those shoes must be uncomfortable now.”

She looked back over her shoulder, up at the stunning face now marked by a winning smile. No, that mouth was no flaw. Masculine and firm, it turned him from merely beautiful to seductive. He gazed down at her warmly. Perhaps a little too warmly. That should have alarmed her anew. Instead little flutters beat inside her. It was all she could do not to blush and mew.

“No, thank you. I will manage.”

“You do not have to be afraid. I promise to behave myself. I am utterly harmless.”

His expression, most amused by his own words, put the lie to his reassurance. Come with me and I will show you the most wicked delights, those teasing eyes promised.

“I am not afraid of you, sir. Your horse, however, terrifies me. Could you keep back a bit more?”

He held back, but still followed. “Are you going to the town? It is some distance. At least a mile.”

“I would not accept a ride with you, even if I had five miles to walk. Please, be on your way, and I will be on mine.”

A nod of acquiescence. He turned the black beast, trotted down the lane, then halfway up the drive to the house. He then sat there looking at it. He had given up the game because something interested him more than dallying with her.

Eva looked back one more time before the bend in the road took the rider out of her view. He appeared magnificent, with the breeze blowing back his hair so his fine profile cut the sky, his gaze absorbed and pensive. If she were a good artist and not just a middling copyist, she would feature him in a grand composition full of dashing action. Instead, she painted his image on her memory.

Her ruined shoes did not bother her on the half mile to her family home. Nor did the clumsy weight of the painting. She smiled all the way. How bad can a poor spinster’s day be when the most beautiful man she had ever seen in her life flirts with her?

*   *   *

How like Percy to let the property go to ruin. Percy had known he would never win in Chancery, so while his lawyers kept the case languishing in court, he had simply let time devalue the object of the contest.

Gareth rode out his frustration, galloping hard. By the time he handed the stallion over to a groom at an inn, the worst of his anger was gone.

The next day he rode into Coventry much recovered. He had a lot of practice at swallowing disappointment, and had learned early that if he allowed Percy to ruin his mood for days on end, he handed Percy a victory.

Besides, Percy was dead. That thought alone made the day sunnier.

He dismounted in front of an elegant house of more than average size. No ruin this, but then Percy had never been able to touch what their father had given to Mrs. Johnson. Gareth hoped that Percy’s last thought had been one of fury over how neatly Father had worked that out.

Mrs. Johnson received him in her delicate drawing room. He strode over, bent, and kissed her. Her arm encircled his shoulders so the kiss became an embrace.

“It is so good to see you, Gareth. I assume you have heard the news.”

He settled into a chair. “I returned as soon as I read about it, Mother. Terrible news. Just terrible.”

His mother maintained a sober face, but her eyes sparkled at his ironic tone. “Yes, terrible. He was still so young. Why, what, thirty-three? So sudden and unexpected too.”

“A tragedy.”

“Have you been back to Merrywood yet?”

“I thought I would see you first. I will head there in the morning.”

She reached over and patted his arm affectionately. He rarely had to explain much to his mother. They were of like minds, just as surely as they were of like visage. His eyes, his nose, even his mouth came from her. Had Allen Hemingford, the third Duke of Aylesbury, been less sure of her he might have suspected Gareth was not his bastard at all. Instead, he had accepted his mistress’s claim, and fulfilled his contract to her.

That contract, worked out when she was eighteen, had not only provided this house, a carriage, servants, and an income for life. Being shrewd, she had also insisted her children by the duke be provided for, and be allowed to have the surname Fitzallen in the ancient way—bastard of Allen. Percy had never been able to interfere with the income Gareth received, either. The house near Langdon’s End was a different matter. Aylesbury had left that to him in a codicil to his will. Percy had contested the legacy before his father was cold.

Not that the income came close to his mother’s. On it, he could live as a gentleman bachelor with a decent degree of fashion. As it was, however, almost all of it went to the lawyers pleading his case in Chancery.

So he had found ways to augment it. Fortunately, he inherited his mother’s shrewdness, and doing so had not been too difficult after finishing the education also provided in that contract. An eye for art had helped.

Other gentlemen might not invite him to their parties and would never introduce their sisters and daughters to him, but his blood meant they might trust him to find a buyer when they had a collection to sell. With the economy in shambles these days, a great deal of art was changing hands. It was the sort of occupation that did not reek of trade, since he did it all as a favor for everyone involved.

“You just returned, you said.” Mrs. Johnson spoke while she served the coffee one of her servants had brought. She was entitled to four of them. There had been a Mr. Johnson for a short while. Perhaps as long as a week, Gareth guessed, before the man took the healthy payment made to him and sailed to America.

When the duke had met Amanda Albany, she was unmarried. An innocent. What the duke wanted was not done with unmarried girls. So he arranged a marriage for her, with an army captain by the name of Johnson. Only it was not Johnson’s nuptial bed to which young Amanda Albany had gone that wedding night.

“I disembarked less than a week ago. Why? Does it matter?”

“It may. I have been in correspondence with old Stuart. You remember, the footman with the limp. He and I have remained friends since Allan died. He says there is some question about Percival’s death. The coroner has left the entire matter open, and investigations are being made by the magistrate.”

“Has anyone laid down information that would imply something untoward happened?”

“No, but eyebrows are up. A sudden digestive infirmity with extreme pain and quick death—well, my eyebrows would be up too.”

Hence the notice in the paper in Amsterdam, that inquiries were under way. “You worried that they would look to me, didn’t you?”

“The enmity between the two of you has been long, and the business over that legacy might encourage them to wonder.”

“Have no fear. I was out of the country. I can prove it.”

Her expression lightened. She suddenly looked younger than her forty-eight years. Also intelligent and formidable. She would have made the duke a splendid duchess had he not already married Percy’s mother, and had Amanda Albany not been a butler’s daughter.

Her change in mood implied she had worried a bit about his doings recently. It is a hell of a thing when your own mother thinks you capable of murder. Then again, given the right circumstances, she probably was also.

“I expect Lancelot and Ives will be at Merrywood,” she said. “What with the title’s transition to Lance and the settling of the estate.”

“I hope so. I want to see them.” Since Lance now became duke, presumably he would be involved in the inquiries. Ives would take a hand in the estate settling, being a lawyer.

He did not lie in saying he wanted to see his half brothers. Unlike the relationship he had with Percy, Gareth had gotten on well enough with them over the years. And, of course, Lance would now decide about that case in Chancery.

“There is to be a reinterment next week,” his mother said. “A mausoleum was quickly built, to Percival’s deathbed orders. Now that it is ready, they are digging him up to put him in it. It is a monstrosity, according to Mr. Stuart. I have a drawing here somewhere. I shall find it, so you can prepare yourself. It is so hideous that one wonders if he was determined to be remembered for something, even if it was being the duke who was buried in the ugliest pile in the family graveyard.”

“He never had any taste. Father always said so, which drove him mad.” He spoke absently, his mind on other things. If magistrates were sniffing around a duke’s death, the new duke was not likely to turn his mind to minor matters, like a small property tied up in the courts. Damnation, even in death Percy was going to be an ass.

“I rode up near Langdon’s End,” he said, “before coming here.”

His mother’s expression of forbearance chastised him. She thought he should let it go. The daughter of a butler and the mistress of a duke, she did not have a sense of property, even if she had a life interest in this house.

“He has let it go to ruin. There is no caretaker. It is derelict and turning into a shell. I doubt any furniture remains worth using. I was told thieves have been busy.”

“Did you enter it?”

“I am forbidden to, remember? I walked around the outside, however, and looked in a few windows. He knew contesting the will would not hold, so he made sure when I finally got it, the house would be almost worthless.”

“Perhaps fate has intervened before that happened. Lance has no reason to continue the fight.”

“Perhaps.” He stood. “If you don’t mind, I will go above. I have been on the road too many days.”

He took his leave, but her voice stopped him at the door.

“Lady Chester wrote to me. Her niece still sighs over you, and wonders when you will return to London.”

Lady Chester’s niece was an attractive woman in an unhappy marriage to a boorish viscount. “When I do, I will call on her, but she will be disappointed if she expects anything more.”

“You love and leave too quickly, Gareth. No wonder your reputation is not the best.”

“I would have stayed longer in the lady’s bed if she had not started to try to buy me. A man does not allow his lover to keep him if he has any pride. I did us both a favor in ending it.”

“You were not so particular with Lady Dalmouth.”

“I was much younger then, and Lady Dalmouth had much to recommend her besides her gifts.” Most notably, Lady Dalmouth possessed sexual experience such as few men are honored to enjoy. Randy, resentful, and ready to take on the world, he had been a willing student, and had barely noticed how he had become the lady’s whore until the morning she ordered him to change his coat because she did not favor its color that day.

“Women are kept all the time. I managed to hold on to my pride well enough. I do not see why it should be any different for men if two people share affection.”

He had hurt her. He had not meant to, but one hour in his mother’s presence and he was fifteen again, and she was trying to plan his life.

“You were not merely the duke’s kept woman. You were his true wife and the law be damned. Write to Lady Chester and tell her that I am enthralled with a widow in Amsterdam, so her niece does not expect me to dance attendance if I go up to town.”

CHAPTER 3

“They look dry to me,” Rebecca said. She gingerly tapped the surface of the painting with her fingertips, then peered to see if any paint had come off on them.

“That one needs another week,” Eva muttered, her attention mostly on the painting she had carried home three days earlier, at the cost of a pair of shoes.

“The others don’t.”

“I cannot go to Birmingham every time a painting is ready. We can ill afford that. I will wait until all of those are dry, then transport them all at once.”

Rebecca sighed loudly and threw herself on the divan. Eva felt bad for her sister. Compared to the excitements in Birmingham, their home on the outskirts of Langdon’s End and the town of Langdon’s End itself held little of interest. The place where one was born and raised never did if one had an adventurous spirit. Rebecca itched for novelties, travel, and the worlds her reading revealed to her.

For a year now, Rebecca had been petitioning to go to London. Eva appeased her by letting her go along on the periodic visits to Birmingham when Eva took her paintings to Mr. Stevenson, a stationer who put them in his window for sale.

Her sister lounged on the divan, one of the few substantial pieces of furniture that had not been sold. She pouted prettily, but then all of Rebecca’s expressions looked adorable. Her hair poured down her shoulders, making a thick stream of shiny curls so luxurious no one would notice that the dress she wore had been mended in four places.

Eva envied Rebecca sometimes, which was not fair. Rebecca could not help being beautiful. Only it felt unjust that Rebecca had gotten the better version of everything they had in common. Rebecca’s blue eyes possessed the color and depth of a clear, perfect sea, while Eva’s could only be called really blue on the sunniest days. The looking glass reflected back some nondescript color too pale to be notable, no matter what it might be. And Rebecca’s hair had the rich, deep color of mahogany, while Eva’s own appeared the flat, dull brown of a tree trunk. If that were not bad enough, Rebecca was also smarter. If she demonstrated none of the wiliness required for survival, it was only because Eva sheltered her from the experiences that called forth such shrewdness.

A girl as lovely as Rebecca deserved better than what she now knew. So far, however, other than those day trips to Birmingham, Eva had not been able to give Rebecca the chance for better. She had a plan, however, and this painting she now started was part of it.

Eva turned her attention back to her task and debated whether to remove the heavy plaster frame before proceeding. She would have to put it back on if she did, but she worried she might get paint on it if she did not. It dwarfed the oil canvas it decorated. She had never understood how owners of art could not see as clear as day when a frame detracted from the treasure it held.

Deciding to leave the frame on, she set her canvas panel on her easel next to the chair. Her canvas was larger than the painting by almost three inches in height, but she could not afford another. She would just have to dab in more up there, extending the trees and sky.

“Why did you choose that picture this time?” Rebecca asked, now standing by her shoulder. “I can’t imagine who will buy your copy. The subject is not grand at all.”

The painting showed three little boys playing near a fountain. Rosy-cheeked and bedecked in their best garments, they formed an informal group portrait most likely, but might have been done merely to indulge the artist’s whimsy.

“It is by Gainsborough, Rebecca. Someone will buy it for that reason alone since his style is still popular. And the boys will appeal to mothers and grandmothers in ways Greek gods will not.”

“Only if the gods are clothed. Paint them naked and those mothers will like them well enough.”

“Rebecca!”

“Please do not act shocked. If the sisters Neville have books of engravings of naked statues in their library, I think it is safe to say that women do not mind viewing such things.”

The sisters Neville were two spinsters of considerable income who lived in Langdon’s End. They saw in Rebecca a potential fellow bluestocking and made their library available to her—including, it appeared, engravings of ancient statues of naked men.

“I am sure the sisters have those books only because they are educational about the ancient Greeks.”

“Oh, yes, they are educational.” Rebecca smiled slyly. “I have learned a lot. Come with me sometime and I’ll show you the best ones.”

“If I come with you, it will be for better things than that.” Eva opened her paint box and began smearing paints she had mixed yesterday onto her palette. “Now go away. I must concentrate on this.”

Rebecca pouted again. “But I wanted to talk to you about something very important. I have been thinking about our lives here, and believe we should make a change. I have a plan . . .”

Eva stopped hearing what Rebecca said. The words became a sound in the background of her consciousness, much like a running brook will flow without one hearing every bubble. She barely noticed when Rebecca left.

Four hours later, while she cleaned her brushes and admired the day’s progress, a few of her sister’s words poked through the fog of her memory. They nibbled and jabbed until she paid them some mind and tried to reconstruct the content.

When she thought she had, she laughed. Surely Rebecca had not said that. Her sister would never propose in all seriousness that they sell the house, take the money, and go to London to become courtesans.

*   *   *

Merrywood Manor, five miles outside Cheltenham in the Gloucester hills, had not changed one bit during Percival’s time as duke. He was leaving the renovation of its dated Palladian-derived design for his future duchess, he liked to say. Gareth assumed Percy was too miserly to ever renovate, or even take a wife, although the latter probably would have eventually occurred, a duke’s duties being what they were. Percy’s unwillingness to invest in the estate’s properties had been obvious as Gareth rode in. A tenant cottage that had burned down at least five years ago still remained a pile of charred wood, and even Merrywood itself displayed evidence of needing some maintenance.

Gareth presented himself at the door of the manor house the way he always did, as a visitor. A bastard did not treat the family estate as home. The first time he came after his father died, Percy made the limitations clear by refusing to receive him. His father always had, and even the servants gave him entry during his father’s life, even if his father was not at home.

He had watched his father’s burial from the saddle of his horse on an overlooking hill. As the cream of the peerage carried the casket to the simple grave, a carriage rolled up and his mother stepped out. Head high, wearing an expression that dared Percy or anyone else to interfere, she had walked through the gathering of nobles to stand by the graveside while her lover was laid to rest. The duchess had been dead a good dozen years by then, but Gareth suspected his mother would have done it even if the duchess, too, had stood by the grave.

Today the door of Merrywood Manor bore a huge wreath draped in black bombazine. He wondered if Percy, with his last breaths, had ordered this gargantuan wreath along with the mausoleum.

He waited in the reception hall while his card was carried away, and followed the butler to the library after his reception had been given the nod. In the library he found Ives, the youngest of the legitimate brothers, and at thirty, two years older than Gareth. Officially named Ywain, which he hated, Ives was tall like all of the third duke’s progeny. He now stood by a window that showed off his classical features. Its light caught the golden streaks in his dark brown hair. Upon hearing the door open he turned. A black armband wrapped the sleeve of his dark coat.

They waited for the butler to leave. Ives fought a battle with a grin that wanted to break out on his face. Devilish delight showed in his green eyes. He bit back the expression, coughed, and assumed a somber demeanor appropriate to the reunion. “Good of you to come, Gareth. I know Percy would be touched.”

Gareth kept his expression blank with difficulty. “I read about it in Amsterdam and was on a packet by morning. So unexpected. So shocking.”

“Yes, yes. As you can imagine, we are beside ourselves.”

Oh, he could imagine. Around the time he turned fifteen, Gareth had realized Lance and Ives were his comrades in arms against Percy. They knew why he hated the duke’s heir, but he still did not know what had happened in this family to set full-blooded brother against full-blooded brother.

“Amsterdam, you say?” Ives asked.

“Yes.”

“I am glad to hear it. I assume your journey was both pleasurable and profitable.”

Someone else who had wondered whether Percy had been done in by his bastard half brother. Gareth could hardly mind. He must have threatened to kill Percy half a dozen times in Ives’s hearing.

“I am brokering a French count’s collection. I found an industrialist here who has the money, and who desires an instant gallery to grace his newly built grand house. The paintings should arrive in a fortnight.”

Ives gestured to a tray with a brandy decanter and raised his eyebrows quizzically. When Gareth nodded, Ives proceeded to pour. “Lance will want you to find such a buyer for some pictures from here. The ones Percy bought are not to his taste.”

Gareth took the glass and sipped. “Are they to anyone’s? I cannot sell what no one will buy.”

“Perhaps you can locate a rich industrialist with bad eyesight. Or you can lie and claim they are the finest paintings dabbed in the last two decades.”

“Only if we speak of works done by Spanish nuns. All those pastel fat cherubs and heaven-gazing saints with their palms of martyrdom— Do you think Percy was a secret dissenter?”

“That would require him to have had principles of some kind, would it not?”

Gareth almost choked. Ives sucked in his cheeks.

“Oh, hell,” Ives sighed. “It won’t do to be speaking ill of the dead. Not now. We would not want the servants to see us as anything but suitably mournful. Reports of raucous glee might be misunderstood. God forgive me, Gareth, he was my brother—but when I got the news in London, it was all I could do not to throw open the window and shoot a few pistol balls into the sky to celebrate.”

“I’ll wager you didn’t only because the sound would have frightened your actress friend. How is she?”

“Expensive.”

Gareth assumed that affair would end soon. “Why would reports of our mood be misunderstood? I assume no one believes he was well loved.”

Ives turned very sober indeed. “It was possibly murder, Gareth. You surely heard. Even the papers allude to it.”

“Were you hoping I was in England that day and eyes would turn to me?”

He got a sharp look for that. “Eyes had already turned. Inquiries are afoot in London to learn your whereabouts. So it is a damned good thing you were out of the country. I am truly relieved to have one fewer brother to protect with my lawyer’s eloquence.”

They stood there, glasses in hand, drinking the brandy.

“Where were you that day?” Gareth asked.

“In London. In court during the day and at a dinner party at night. I am of no interest to the magistrate.”

They each took another swallow.

“And Lance?”

Ives let out a deep, long breath. “He was here. He was right in this damned house.”

“Indeed I was,” a voice said.

Gareth looked over his shoulder. Lance had just entered the library, appearing his formidable, unconventional self. Dark-haired, dark-eyed, dressed in arrogance and sharp intelligence as surely as black coats and boots, he flashed a smile that stupid men misunderstood as friendly. He had not shaved today, and the rough growth on his face emphasized rather than hid the long, thin scar on his right cheek.

He strode over, clapped a welcoming grasp on Gareth’s shoulder, then helped himself to some brandy. He faced them cup in hand.

“Pity I did not have the courage to do it. I think we are all in agreement, gentlemen, that Percy was a terrible excuse for a human being who sowed sorrow wherever he went. Let us toast him in death for the years of misery he will never now create.”

“You must stop saying things like that,” Ives snapped, slamming down his own glass. “A modicum of discretion is in order at least.”

“He is worried they will hang me,” Lance said to Gareth. His tone contained indifference to Ives’s concerns, or anyone’s opinion.

“I am not worried they will— Damn it, do you want people to wonder your whole life, should no culprit be found?”

“Hell if I care. As Duke of Aylesbury I expect I could survive a few cuts.”

“Listen to me. I do not expect you to weep over his grave, just try not to dance on it. Damnation, a man has died, and it is incumbent on his closest relatives to at least show some seriousness, lest eyebrows rise.”

“He is right,” Gareth said, working his face into an expression suitably glum. “A man has died, as he said.”

“Of course I am right,” Ives intoned.

Lance lowered his eyelids and smoothed away the smile. Feature by feature he created a mask. “More like this?”

“Yes, much better,” Ives said.

“Hellishly uncomfortable. It will take too much thought to keep it up.”

“Yet you must. Think of me inheriting everything after you swing. That should keep that grin in check.”

“Don’t they have to prove there was a murder before accusing someone of murder?” Gareth asked.

“The damned physician wrote up that he was possibly poisoned,” Lance said. “Hell, wouldn’t you think that if the man paying you is dead, you would be currying favor with the man who will pay you next, and not create drama by putting in writing there may have been a murder? That scribble was enough to stir the pot, and to support the accusation should other facts become known.”

“Which will not happen,” Ives said. “There are no other facts. There was no murder. Percy ate something that was tainted, or succumbed to a long-festering malady of the gut. That is our story, gentlemen. The magistrates are on a fool’s errand, and the coroner is making much ado about nothing.”

Still wearing his sobriety, Lance threw himself into a chair, lounging in the bored, languid pose that so clearly communicated both his arrogance and ennui with life. Gareth thought he appeared thinner, and somewhat haggard. He could not tell if current events caused that, or if it only reflected a long period of hedonistic excess prior to Percy’s death. They none of them had reputations as saints, but Lance also could not be bothered with discretion or restraint.

For a few minutes Lance’s vision turned inward, but then he focused attention on Gareth. “Perhaps you should give the eulogy, Mordred. You were the first to see all he could be.”

“Do not be perverse,” Ives scolded. “And I trust you are not going to pick up using that nickname for Gareth.”

“If you want, I will do it,” Gareth said. “As for how he addressed me, Ives, he is only reminding me of how eloquent my eulogy could be if I am given a free hand.”

Mordred had been Percy’s name for him. Resentful that their father had graced a bastard with the name of one of King Arthur’s knights, just like his legal children, Percy had decided a more appropriate one was in order. The conceit of those names had been the duchess’s idea. The duke’s using it on his bastard, too, had been an insult to her that just kept cutting.

“I am joking of course. You can be a pallbearer at the interment if you like. If you prefer to decline that is understandable.”

“I will watch it the way I watched my father’s funeral, from afar, if you do not mind.”

Lance threw back the rest of his brandy. “Hell, no, I don’t mind. I think I will ride. Waiting for something to happen is driving me mad. I would suggest we all visit a brothel, but Ives here has insisted we must pretend to be too sad for pleasure.”

He strode from the library. Ives watched him go, then turned and aimed for the garden doors. “Come walk with me, Gareth. I need to speak to you on another matter.”

*   *   *

“He laughs at the danger, but he is no fool. It is unlikely that he will ever be formally accused—he is now a duke, after all—but the shadow can follow him forever.” Ives spoke between puffs on a cigar. Ives smoked only when agitated. That he had resumed the habit said he was concerned about recent events and not assuming it would all turn out well.

“I expect his reputation does not help.” Lance had been a hell-raiser as a young man. Being the spare had made him more reckless than Ives, or even Gareth. A darkness lived in Lance, too, its origins unknown to Gareth. Not a criminal darkness, however. The notion Lance would poison anyone, let alone his own brother, could not be taken seriously.

“What truly does not help is that he cuckolded one of the magistrates,” Ives said. “The man knows it and will not let this chance pass, duke or no duke.”

Gareth had to laugh. “Remind me, should I be tempted, never to bed the wife of a man who can give me legal trouble.”

“As if you would listen any more than he would. I must remain here with Lance and play the lawyer to his incorrigible client. I do not want him doing or saying something while in his cups that only makes it worse, and I want to keep informed of the thinking of those who are looking to make trouble.”

“That sounds wise.”

“Wise, but inconvenient. I was supposed to go north to investigate something, and now I cannot. I thought perhaps you might indulge me and take my place.”

Gareth hesitated. Ives often served as the Crown’s prosecutor in serious crimes. The something he needed to do up north might involve confronting dangerous men. While Gareth acquitted himself well enough in such situations, he was not inclined to seek them out, let alone for third parties unnamed.

Besides, he had his own mission now.

“I had thought to remain here for a few days at least, after the reinterment. I hope to speak with Lance.”

“That property is on your mind, of course. How could it not be. If you do this for me, I will plead your case for you, and convince him to drop the matter entirely. I do not believe it will take more than a few minutes and a few words, once I bring his attention to it.”

Ives had tried that with Percy, to no avail. Gareth thought Ives a brilliant lawyer, but property had a way of bringing out the worst in men.

“Furthermore,” Ives said. “This business I speak of is in the region of that lodge. I will get Lance to agree to allow you to use the house while you are there. You can begin settling in.”

Suddenly Ives’s proposal had appeal. “What is the matter you need me for?”

“A collection of art has gone missing.”

Not only appeal now, but real interest. “Whose collection?”

“It was not owned by one person. Rather, it comprised works owned by a number of people.”

“Which people?”

“No one important. Only half of the members of the House of Lords.”

*   *   *

“It was during the war,” Ives said. He and Gareth now sat on a bench beneath a tree. “Right around 1800. Everyone worried about invasion. You probably remember how it was then, even though we were boys. Napoleon already had the reputation for cultural rape. He picked out the best art and sent it back through the lines, to France. A number of very prominent lords took to worrying about the art in their manor homes. Their wives and daughters might suffer the worst, but, by George, their paintings would not end up in some French palace.”

“You say it like a joke, but a lot of art was looted by the French.”

“As it has been by every army down through time. Napoleon’s methodical looting distressed these lords, however. The Corsican brought experts with him who knew what they wanted. It was assumed he knew which families here owned what, and had a list ready. Any house gallery between the coast and London was considered vulnerable. So they hit on a solution to foil him.”

“Move the art,” Gareth guessed.

Ives nodded. “The best of the best got crated up and moved north, to the center of England, to await the end of the war. Only when that day came, and those who organized this went to retrieve it, it was not there.”

“Stolen?”

“It is not being called theft yet.”

“Where was it stored?”

“That is where it gets delicate. The repository was a property owned by the Duke of Devonshire.”

“Delicate puts a fine point to it. No wonder there has been no rumor or gossip about this. To say it was stolen insults a very powerful man.”

“There has been mild criticism about his vigilance. Nothing more. No one has dared to suggest he or the current duke in any way decided to divert any of the paintings to his own collection.”

“That family owns one of the best collections in the realm. They do not need anyone else’s.”

“Yet the paintings sent north are gone. The government has preached patience because the Regent had his hand in the original idea, but tempers are wearing thin. I was charged with learning what I could.”

Learning what he could might mean all kinds of things with Ives.

“Do you intend to question Devonshire?” Gareth asked.

“Do I look mad? He is coming for the interment, however.”

“I would not have thought Percy would have found any favor with Devonshire.”

“He didn’t. At all. The last duke once called him a miserable little demon. At best it is a matter of rank respecting itself. A duke dies and other dukes attend his funeral. At worst, the current Duke of Devonshire is coming to drive a stake into Percy’s heart.”

“Perhaps Lance will broach the topic for you. I say there, Devvie, what do you think became of all that art your father agreed to store in your attics? He would do it if you asked.”

“The danger is he will do it even if I don’t ask. Do not remind him of the matter. He knows of it, of course. All the lords do. Those who lost have not been silent among their peers. Since none of ours went missing, our brother is unlikely to think of it unless prodded.”

“How will you explain my little mission to him, then?”

“I was not intending to explain anything. We have never expected an accounting of your comings or goings.”

In other words, the new Duke of Aylesbury would not give a damn why Gareth was going north.

“If you arrange for me to have use of the lodge, we have ourselves a bargain.”

Ives stood. “I promise to see that legacy wholly resolved, once this other business is behind us. Until then, Lance will agree it is only right that you should use it as your own.”

It was all the assurance Gareth needed. Lance could be willful, even whimsical, but he was fair. A clean deed would be forthcoming sooner rather than later now. That derelict pile would be his, and he could start improving it. He followed Ives back to the house, making plans.

CHAPTER 4

“The big house has been let, I hear.” Rebecca mentioned the news while she sat on a burlap sack, watching Eva pluck weeds. The plantings behind their home had been laid out for flowers and shrubbery, but Eva had started tucking vegetables amid the blooms three years ago. It saved them a few pounds a year on food, all for little effort.

Growing vegetables had been the last of a long string of economies, and the one Eva least minded. Her father had sold off most of the land, and what was left brought in minimal rents. Her late brother’s five years of infirmity meant he had not been able to supplement their income with any kind of employment, not that Nigel would have taken up a trade even if he had had the health to do so. He had been a gentleman’s son and intended to die a gentleman himself, even if it meant his older sister had to sell the household furnishings to ensure they all had enough to eat.

“Who has taken it? I cannot imagine anyone wanting to live there,” Eva said.

“No one knows, but some boys saw a light through the lower windows two nights ago, and there are reports of a horse in the stable.”

“If not for the horse, I would say it was all nonsense and some of Langdon End’s young men had decided to get drunk there one night.”

“Whoever it is, I expect they will make themselves known in town soon. They are sure to be quality people. Even in its present state, the rent would be high for such a large house and property.”

“I expect so.” Eva hoped the rumors were wrong, and that at worst the house’s owner had sent a servant to stay a brief while. Perhaps some traveler had simply made use of an empty house and would soon be on his way. She had come to think of that house as abandoned and rather counted on it remaining so.

“I think you should call on them,” Rebecca said. “Perhaps they have a daughter who would be my friend.”

“I will do that if you promise not to complain that our house is not suitable for guests, since they are bound to then call on us in turn.”

Rebecca flushed. “Maybe if they have a daughter I will meet her in town.”

“Maybe you should allow her to know your circumstances when you meet her. There is no shame in our situation, and if this imaginary new friend is worthy of the name, she will not care.”

Rebecca stood abruptly, her brow knitted from her pique. “I do not mind our situation, but I do resent your acceptance of it. Instead of improving, it gets worse and now I cannot even have friends, because we do not have enough chairs since you sold them all.”

“I sold them so you would not go hungry. And, of course, our situation is improving, even if you do not see the fruits of that yet. Our year of mourning is now over, and we can participate in society again. You can attend assemblies and meet other girls in town, and if you can restrain yourself from talking about philosophy in the first few conversations, you will find friends who will change everything.”

“I am not speaking of social matters.”

“Financial ones, then? My paintings are selling well enough so our circumstances are not so dire as they were, even with the bad harvest and unpaid rents. I think I am doing splendidly.” She smiled and gave her sister a wink. “You are uncommonly out of sorts, Rebecca. It is not like you to complain with such vehemence.”

Her attempt at lightening the conversation was to no avail. “What happens if no one wants your paintings someday?” Rebecca asked.

“I will find another way to improve our lot, should that happen. You are not to worry.”

“I do worry. You may see improvement, but I see more of the same for years on end. I say we make big changes, not your little ones. Let us make the best of our breeding and youth and blaze another trail while we still can.”

Eva looked up at her sister. Rebecca’s face flushed and her posture stiffened, but she met Eva’s gaze boldly.

“You refer to your improper proposal from the other day, I fear.” She should have paid more attention at the time, and pulled that particular weed at once. “You cannot be serious, Rebecca.”

“Why not? The sisters Neville say such a life can bring a woman security and even riches.”

Eva laughed and stood. “Darling, you do not even comprehend what such a life entails. I wonder if the sisters Neville really do either. I cannot imagine why they would speak of such things to you.”

“I asked them, and they answered frankly. Not everyone thinks women should remain ignorant.”

“You are not a woman. You are a child.”

“Oh, tosh! Look at me, Eva. Really look at me. Do not let the memories obscure what you see.” Tears sparkled in Rebecca’s eyes. Her defiant expression turned into one of pitiable unhappiness. “I am no child. I will be nineteen soon. Not one man has proposed. Not one. I have not even had a tragic love, like you did. And look at yourself. You used to have dreams of being an artist, but you have only done copies for years now. And I cannot remember the last time I saw you sketch.”

Turning on her heel, Rebecca ran to the house.

Eva gazed over the garden she had known all her life. A memory came to her of playing with a much younger Rebecca amid the shrubbery. Then others flowed, of comforting her little sister when their father passed away.

She dropped to her knees and continued pulling weeds. As her gloved hands yanked the tiny intruders out, her heart accommodated the words with which Rebecca had slapped her, hard.

Her sister did not really want to become a fallen woman. Rebecca just wanted to know she would have some kind of life besides this one. The lack of suitors would weigh on any young woman Rebecca’s age, and cause a restlessness that made her vulnerable.

Her thoughts turned to Charles, the “tragic love” Rebecca had thrown in her face. Not really tragic. Rebecca had been too dramatic. After all, Charles had not died. He had not forsaken her. He had merely gone away as he had planned, only without her because she could not—no, would not—marry him and go too. To do so would mean leaving her brother alone and sick, weak from that pistol wound that forever after affected his health.

That duty had cost her dearly. Marriage, her youth, her art—

She avoided thinking about all of it, because when she did her heart turned angry and frightened.

She almost never thought about Charles anymore. She rarely grew wistful with thoughts of what might have been. She hated that she did now.

She shut the memories away and thought about her plans for the future, plans she did not confide to Rebecca lest they not come to pass. With her sister’s unhappiness, it might be time to embark on that path sooner than intended.


His Wicked Reputation: Wicked Trilogy, by Madeline Hunter

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Most helpful customer reviews

22 of 24 people found the following review helpful. Aging fan disappointed again. By OLT I'm on record as being quite the Madeline Hunter fan. I've read every book she has written and will continue to read the books she writes in the future. That said, she's starting to disappoint me. And that's because she had set the bar pretty high for herself and now she's not quite clearing it.First to the good things about her new book: 1) Interesting mystery about theft of an art collection; 2) Personable and sometimes interesting characters; 3) Pleasant romance with some sexy moments; 4) A hero who is less chauvinistic and domineering than the usual Hunter H.This new series will center on three sons of a deceased duke: Lance, now present duke after the recent death of oldest brother Percy; Ives, heir to Lance; and Gareth, their illegitimate half-brother. As this first story begins Percy has died mysteriously and suspiciously. This death and the artwork theft will be central to the plot.Hero Gareth is an art broker who travels the world collecting art for others and living off his commissions. Heroine Eva Russell is an aspiring artist. She's also the sole provider for herself and younger sister Rebecca, after the (suspicious) death of their brother. Eva copies art work by well-known masters and sells her copies to survive.Well, the story will deal with stolen art, copied art, forgeries being sold as the real deal, and a couple of (suspicious) deaths. We'll also have the required romance, of course.The romance is where things disappoint me. It's just so been-there, done-that. Gareth is extremely sexually experienced, maybe God's gift to womanhood. Eva is a virgin spinster who has given up on herself as a sexually attractive being and lives to support and, she hopes, to marry off her beautiful younger sister. I've read so many romances by so many authors with similar Hs and hs that the trope tends to make me yawn.Another thing that disappoints is that Hunter has taken to pandering to the requirement for instant sex that's rampant nowadays in HRs. I really would have appreciated a bit more conversation, relationship development and sexual tension before the H and h jumped into bed together. OK, maybe I'm just old-fashioned but I like a reason for sex other than that "gee, he's so, so sexy and I'm so on the shelf that I'll never marry so I may as well find out what it's like between the sheets with a sexy man who won't in a million years marry me but that's OK because, really, who would marry me anyway".And my last disappointment to mention is that I don't find Hunter's writing to be as good as in earlier books. That may be another pander or maybe she's just tired. Not even the conversations are as clever as they used to be in a Hunter book. That said, you'll still find me reading Ives' story when it comes out.

19 of 21 people found the following review helpful. About a 3.1 By lark Gareth was an art broker, Eva an artist who copied masterworks to sell to support herself and her sister. Both characters were likable, the secondary characters were interesting, the novel was written well, the plot and the sub-plot hung in there, the mystery was engaging. So, why am I not raving?Well, I didn't feel I really knew Gareth. I knew he was a bastard.....Lord knows that was mentioned often enough. I really got that, so why harp on it over and over? I knew he was hot in bed. But there wasn't enough internal dialogue for me to get in his head, into his thoughts, and I like to live the characters. Even more everyday dialogue between Gareth and Eva may have helped.For those who like steam, you have it here.This was a pretty fair story. Not one I was unable to put down, by any means, but maybe the next in the series will float my boat.Enjoy your reading! :)

22 of 25 people found the following review helpful. His Wicked Reputation - A great introduction to a new series! By Louisa Cornell If you are looking for the consummate rake with the bedroom skills to match his reputation, Gareth Fitzallen is your man. He may well be the sexiest hero Madeline Hunter has ever written, and that, my friends, is saying something. The intriguing thing about Gareth is that is exactly how he sees himself. The bastard son of a duke, acknowledged and supported by his aristocratic father, he strives to prove he is much more, all the while believing himself to be less. He is handsome and successful as an art broker, yet he still cannot believe he has or even deserves the love, respect and acceptance of his two legitimate brothers or society at large.Eva Russell reminds me very much of a young Jane Austen. She is the creative one, the free spirit and yet, life's circumstances have forced her to be the sensible, responsible one. What I love about her is she takes on providing for her family in a very creative and daring way. She bears the burden of responsibility with a wicked blaze of bold invention and I love her for it. Like Gareth, she has resigned herself to a role - that of the spinster sister doing all she must to maintain her family's status in the world and finding a way to secure a wealthy husband for her sister.One of Madeline Hunter's many gifts is the ability to create characters we can all relate to and root for in every way. Gareth and Eva are drawn together by an explosive passion neither of them can deny. But the heart of their romance is the things they discover about themselves whilst learning about each other. They come to depend on each other, not for the everyday things so much as for the intangibles - the touchstones we need in life to allow us to become more than we believed we could be. The best part is we gain these insights as Gareth and Eva do. In Madeline Hunter's hands we take the journey with them. I love it when that happens!Add all of this to the intrigue of an art theft of unbelievable proportions and incredible political ramifications, a town full of thieves with hearts, a beautiful sister with the mind of a reforming crusader, brothers with an entirely ridiculous appetite for adventure, two opinionated little old harridans and you have what you are always guaranteed with a Madeline Hunter romance - a hot sexy read with a touch of mystery, lots of laughter, two wounded people who have met their match in each other and a happily ever after you are surprised and pleased to reach.I have always loved Madeline Hunter's books. And His Wicked Reputation is no exception. With the first book in this new series she has added yet another dimension to her already considerable talent for writing wicked, funny, sigh-worthy historical romance. I can't wait to read the next one!

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Selasa, 27 Januari 2015

Psycho Psyche (The Cloud Brothers Short Stories Book 7), by James Field

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Psycho Psyche (The Cloud Brothers Short Stories Book 7), by James Field

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Psycho Psyche (The Cloud Brothers Short Stories Book 7), by James Field

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Dr Grenn is a hypnotist, executive, inventor, television personality, and scoundrel. Driven by insatiable greed, he jeopardises the whole world's security and tricks Professor Maurice Masterson into being his scapegoat. Take this short story as a warning, hide it from terrorists, and pray it never comes true…

Psycho Psyche (The Cloud Brothers Short Stories Book 7), by James Field

  • Published on: 2015-03-11
  • Released on: 2015-03-11
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Psycho Psyche (The Cloud Brothers Short Stories Book 7), by James Field


Psycho Psyche (The Cloud Brothers Short Stories Book 7), by James Field

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Fun Story By Bruce James Field’s Psycho Psyche is a short story that would go great as a comic artist’s story. What I mean is, as I read it I thought of the nefarious bad guy type and the protagonist, who match wits. One is sinister, while the other trying to figure out what is going on. I could envision this in a Spider-man comic. So okay, the talking parts are stiff and clichéd, but still fun. It was a flowing fast read and I finished it quickly in just one setting. The end left enough of a question so you wonder if the story will continue, leaving the door wide opened for lots of future adventures.I received a free copy of this book in exchange for my review, and I rate it as four stars.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Unnerving and sinister sci-fi short By Amazon Customer The professor’s latest adventure has him battling a doomsday weapon, terrorists and body hijackers. It’s a sinister, suspenseful story with a few unnerving gadget ideas that are a little too close to reality for comfort. Not many laughs in this story from James Field. It’s definitely an outing where he shows he’s equally capable of delivering a dark science fiction tale as he is a funny one. It’ll make you think twice about answering your phone the next time you get a call from an unlisted number. Get ready for some electric writing that’ll blow your cranial capacitors.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Scary in the best ways By Jenni M I found myself smiling on the first page, which is always a good sign. I enjoyed the almost campy dialogue and descriptions of the two main characters, and I was drawn into the story from the first word.I started to get a little antsy after a couple of pages, but I should have been more patient -- when the Big Moment comes, it's a roller coaster ride to the finish.Oh, and the twist! I love a good twist.Well done, "my good man." ;)

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Psycho Psyche (The Cloud Brothers Short Stories Book 7), by James Field
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Senin, 19 Januari 2015

His Proposed Deal, by Sandi Lynn

His Proposed Deal, by Sandi Lynn

From the mix of understanding and also activities, somebody could enhance their ability and also capacity. It will certainly lead them to live and also work much better. This is why, the pupils, workers, or even employers ought to have reading practice for books. Any book His Proposed Deal, By Sandi Lynn will certainly provide particular expertise to take all benefits. This is exactly what this His Proposed Deal, By Sandi Lynn tells you. It will certainly add even more knowledge of you to life as well as work far better. His Proposed Deal, By Sandi Lynn, Try it and show it.

His Proposed Deal, by Sandi Lynn

His Proposed Deal, by Sandi Lynn



His Proposed Deal, by Sandi Lynn

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~A USA Today Bestselling Novel~ THREE MONTHS. IT WAS ONLY FOR THREE MONTHS. My name is Emma Knight and I’m a twenty-four-year-old woman who was moving from Miami to New York to pursue my dream of attending Parsons School of Design. My plan was set in motion. I was packed and already on my way when I met a man and received an email, both of which altered my plans and changed the course of my life. Max Hamilton, a twenty-five-year-old, panty-melting, rich playboy who was being groomed to take over Hamilton Securities, told me it was for only three months. His proposed deal was that I had to pose as his fiancée until his twenty-sixth birthday so he could collect his trust fund. I’d help him and, in return, he’d help me achieve my dream. It was a win-win situation, right? WRONG. Love was never part of the deal and neither was the secret that Max could never find out about. Intended for readers 18+

His Proposed Deal, by Sandi Lynn

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6109 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-03-27
  • Released on: 2015-03-27
  • Format: Kindle eBook
His Proposed Deal, by Sandi Lynn


His Proposed Deal, by Sandi Lynn

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27 of 28 people found the following review helpful. Wow!! By Samantha Ms. Sandi Lynn blew me out of the water with this book. I started at 9 am in the morning & finished by 12 noon, I could not put this book down. Emma & max meet in a night club in Miami they are both leaving on a flight the next day, so max (who is hot as sin ) basically ask Emma if she wants to go to bed with him & being the good girl she is she says nope & walks away. Everything changes for both of them the next morning on the flight from Miami to New York. This book was so good, you pretty much can't help falling in love with max. I am a BIG fan of Sandi Lynn's books that I believe this just became my favorite book & if you have read the Conner black series your probably thinking I'm crazy but, don't get me wrong Conner will always be my first book boyfriend, max just may have passed him. Overall great, funny happy feeling book :-)

20 of 22 people found the following review helpful. Another must read from this author. By Shona Firstly wow, Sandi Lynn has done it again. His Proposed Deal is another amazing book by this author. I read it in one sitting, once I started I couldn't stop. I finished two days ago and I am still thinking about it, so much so I haven't read anything else yet.I fell in love with Max and Emma's story. Both characters are strong willed and stubborn, a lot of times through the book those qualities had me laughing hard. This book had everything I wanted and more. Hot sex, emotion, laughter and an amazing story.I didn't expect to cry but I did. Sandi always manages to pull emotion out of me in her writing.His proposal starts off as a three month deal, they both didn't expect love, friendship and the bumpy road ahead.A must read!

14 of 15 people found the following review helpful. I love these types of books and when I need to ... By Delaney I love these types of books and when I need to escape I purchase one, although I never review them. I purchased this one purely because it was one that was recommended based on what I was buying previously. I never heard of the author and the summary grabbed my attention.I really felt the need to review this one because I honestly didn't want it to end (Im not kidding). As soon I finished I quickly googled this author to see if there was a second book. I NEED A SEQUEL TO THIS PRONTO!!!!! I could not put it down (to the point where I actually propped it up on my counter and read it while washing some dishes.This is a great read. I highly recommend it!

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Sabtu, 17 Januari 2015

Die Frau aus einer anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), by Caroline Hanson

Die Frau aus einer anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), by Caroline Hanson

Die Frau Aus Einer Anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), By Caroline Hanson Exactly how can you alter your mind to be much more open? There numerous sources that can assist you to enhance your thoughts. It can be from the other experiences and tale from some individuals. Book Die Frau Aus Einer Anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), By Caroline Hanson is among the relied on sources to get. You could discover many publications that we discuss below in this internet site. And also currently, we show you among the best, the Die Frau Aus Einer Anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), By Caroline Hanson

Die Frau aus einer anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), by Caroline Hanson

Die Frau aus einer anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), by Caroline Hanson



Die Frau aus einer anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), by Caroline Hanson

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Als Hellen Foster durch die Zeit zurück ins viktorianische England geschickt wird, um die Erfindung einer todbringenden Waffe zu verhindern, merkt sie sofort, dass dieser Auftrag schwieriger wird als er auf den ersten Blick erscheint: Bei einer Versteigerung soll sie bloß die Waffenpläne ersteigern und diese dann zerstören – schon würden Millionen Leben (später während des Zweiten Weltkrieges) gerettet werden. Auch wenn sie den Rest ihres Lebens als alte Jungfer mit einer Unmenge Katzen verbringen müsste, allein um den Verlauf der Zukunft zu verändern, wäre es die Sache wert. Doch dann trifft sie Edward Clifton, den Herzog von Somervale, den sie erpressen soll, um das nötige Kleingeld für diesen Auftrag zu beschaffen. Er ist einer der mächtigsten Männer des Landes, so umwerfend gutaussehend und unnahbar, dass Debütantinnen in seiner Gegenwart regelmäßig in Ohnmacht fallen. Nach dem ersten Treffen will Hellen eigentlich seine hochwohlgeborene (und recht beeindruckende) Rückansicht nie mehr wiedersehen. Doch als ihre Mission anders verläuft als geplant und unvermutet Gefahren auftauchen, hat Hellen keine Wahl als diesen mächtigen Mann um Hilfe zu bitten, nicht bloß um die Zukunft zu ändern, sondern auch um die Nacht zu überleben …

Die Frau aus einer anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), by Caroline Hanson

  • Published on: 2015-03-14
  • Released on: 2015-03-14
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Die Frau aus einer anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), by Caroline Hanson


Die Frau aus einer anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), by Caroline Hanson

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Four Stars By Sabine Hat mir gefall

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Die Frau aus einer anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), by Caroline Hanson
Die Frau aus einer anderen Zeit (Helen Foster) (German Edition), by Caroline Hanson

Jumat, 16 Januari 2015

Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, by WL Cox

Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, by WL Cox

Do you believe that reading is an essential activity? Discover your reasons why including is essential. Reading a book Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, By WL Cox is one component of enjoyable tasks that will certainly make your life top quality better. It is not regarding just exactly what type of book Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, By WL Cox you review, it is not only concerning the number of e-books you review, it has to do with the practice. Checking out practice will certainly be a way to make e-book Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, By WL Cox as her or his close friend. It will regardless of if they spend cash and invest even more publications to complete reading, so does this e-book Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, By WL Cox

Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, by WL Cox

Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, by WL Cox



Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, by WL Cox

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This episode of Storm Warrior is twisted with health complications, birth, danger, prejudice, hatred, friends, enemies, growth, and an angry neighbor. Charles’s head wound becomes infected, and he has trouble maintaining his balance. Judith and George return to New Orleans with Charles where the doctors operate to save Charles’s life. The hospital visit becomes even more complicated as Judith goes into labor. Recovery is slow for Charles, and although his memory has returned, he has no recollection of the past six weeks. Charles and the family return to Denver and a large number of people are waiting at the ranch to celebrate Charles’s miraculous recovery and the birth of their new baby. Charles sets about buying more property to build a warehouse with a store front and sets his eyes on the vast expanse of land where he was ambushed and travels to Kansas City to talk to the land’s owner to make the largest land purchase of his career, and makes a surprising discovery. Charles visits to his construction sites and returns to Philadelphia with his family, and together, with Darren, they make plans to begin a massive construction job and Charles decides he needs to hire 1,000 men off the street to prevent losing construction jobs to his competition. Darren warns Charles that he has tried to hire men off the street before, and it met with disastrous results. Charles decides to try something new, but he is not sure it will work. Charles’s task of hiring men off the street is complicated by the hatred of blacks and Chinese workers by white workers who are filled with prejudice against people of other cultures. It becomes a situation that Charles must overcome, or fail.

Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, by WL Cox

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #116614 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-03-20
  • Released on: 2015-03-20
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, by WL Cox


Storm Warrior XVI: Miracles, by WL Cox

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Excellent series By Kindle Customer Have read all this series and love them all, waiting for next book to come out, knowingIt to be as good as the last.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Whoa! By Strawz93 Storm Warrior is back , nice. That Harold , the neighbor from hell is such a menace. Gray Wolf is a us marshal, look out all of you bad people, there's a new marshal in town. Love reading this series, it's one of the best reads in the book world. I'm looking forward for the next book.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. ... I have read all of the storm warrior with great interest for the first 9 books 10-16 are just ... By Mike McCormack While I have read all of the storm warrior with great interest for the first 9 books 10-16 are just pages without direction, It seems the author is just putting out pages with nothing new. This is the last one that I will buy.

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Kamis, 15 Januari 2015

The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge, by Michael Punke

The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge, by Michael Punke

Due to this e-book The Revenant: A Novel Of Revenge, By Michael Punke is sold by online, it will certainly relieve you not to publish it. you can get the soft documents of this The Revenant: A Novel Of Revenge, By Michael Punke to save in your computer, gadget, and also a lot more gadgets. It relies on your determination where as well as where you will read The Revenant: A Novel Of Revenge, By Michael Punke One that you should consistently keep in mind is that checking out publication The Revenant: A Novel Of Revenge, By Michael Punke will certainly never finish. You will have going to check out various other publication after finishing a publication, and it's continually.

The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge, by Michael Punke

The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge, by Michael Punke



The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge, by Michael Punke

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NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

A thrilling tale of betrayal and revenge set against the nineteenth-century American frontier, the astonishing story of real-life trapper and frontiersman Hugh Glass

The year is 1823, and the trappers of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company live a brutal frontier life. Hugh Glass is among the company’s finest men, an experienced frontiersman and an expert tracker. But when a scouting mission puts him face-to-face with a grizzly bear, he is viciously mauled and not expected to survive. Two company men are dispatched to stay behind and tend to Glass before he dies. When the men abandon him instead, Glass is driven to survive by one desire: revenge. With shocking grit and determination, Glass sets out, crawling at first, across hundreds of miles of uncharted American frontier. Based on a true story, The Revenant is a remarkable tale of obsession, the human will stretched to its limits, and the lengths that one man will go to for retribution.

The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge, by Michael Punke

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1810 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-10-06
  • Released on: 2015-10-06
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.20" h x .73" w x 5.52" l, .50 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 272 pages
The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge, by Michael Punke

From Publishers Weekly Based on a true incident of heroism in the history of the American West, this debut by a Washington, D.C., international trade attorney and former bureaucrat in the Clinton administration is an almost painfully gripping drama. A Philadelphia-born adventurer, frontiersman Hugh Glass goes to sea at age 16 and enjoys a charmed life, including several years under the flag of the pirate Jean Lafitte and almost a year as a prisoner of the Loup Pawnee Indians on the plains between the Platte and the Arkansas rivers. In 1822, at age 36, Glass escapes, finds his way to St. Louis and enters the employ of Capt. Andrew Henry, trapping along tributaries of the Missouri River. After surviving months of hardship and Indian attack, he falls victim to a grizzly bear. His throat nearly ripped out, scalp hanging loose and deep slashing wounds to his back, shoulder and thigh, Glass appears to be mortally wounded. Initially, Captain Henry refuses to abandon him and has him carried along the Grand River. Unfortunately, the terrain soon makes transporting Glass impossible. Even though his death seems certain, Henry details two men, a fugitive mercenary, John Fitzgerald, and young Jim Bridger (who lived to become a frontier hero) to stand watch and bury him. After several days, Fitzgerald sights hostile Indians. Taking Glass's rifle and tossing Bridger his knife, Fitzgerald flees with Bridget, leaving Glass. Enraged at being left alone and defenseless, Glass survives against all odds and embarks on a 3,000-mile-long vengeful pursuit of his ignominious betrayers. Told in simple expository language, this is a spellbinding tale of heroism and obsessive retribution.Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Review

“The makings of a Western classic, Michael Punke's novel The Revenant provides muscle and sinew to the vengeful and epic tale of mountain man Hugh Glass that even a sow grizzly couldn't rend asunder.” ―Craig Johnson, author of the Walt Longmire novels

“A superb revenge story.” ―The Washington Post Book World

“One of the great tales of the nineteenth-century West.” ―The Salt Lake Tribune

About the Author Michael Punke serves as the U.S. Ambassador to the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. He has also served on the White House National Security Council staff and on Capitol Hill. He was formerly the history correspondent for Montana Quarterly, and an adjunct professor at the University of Montana. He is the author of Fire and Brimstone: The North Butte Mine Disaster of 1917, and Last Stand: George Bird Grinnell, the Battle to Save the Buffalo, and the Birth of the New West. His family home is in Montana.


The Revenant: A Novel of Revenge, by Michael Punke

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169 of 183 people found the following review helpful. High Adventure that Delivers! By J. K. Grice The word REVENANT is defined as "a person who returns, especially supposedly from the dead." There could be no better title for Michael Punke's high spirited western novel. In these pages, we discover historical fiction at its best. Though the book was published some years ago, it seems to be garnering more attention with a re-release, as well as anticipation of the movie THE REVENANT starring Leonardo DiCaprio, due out in January 2016. At any rate, the story centers around legendary "mountain man" Hugh Glass. The time period is the early 1820's, when traders and fur companies were searching out domains in the Rocky Mountains, and in the present day states of Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, Montana, and the Dakotas. It is also a time only 18 years removed from the return of Lewis and Clark from the Pacific and the triumphs of the Corps of Discovery. Word had spread throughout our young nation of the vast areas of lands where a fortune might be made through the hunting and trapping of animals. The lust for furs, hides, and pelts to propitiate European buyers played a major role in this westward expansion. Thus, endeavors like The Rocky Mountain Fur Company sprang into existence and vied with one another to gain strong footholds in prime furbearer sections of the enormous Missouri Territory. Often, financial backing was based out of St. Louis, where teams of men were organized to venture up the Missouri River, as well as its tributaries. The book centers around one such team led by a Captain Henry and included such members as John Fitzgerald, Jim Bridger, and Hugh Glass. Along with surviving the harsh elements of the Wild, these men also had to defend themselves against hostile Indian tribes like the Arikara and the Blackfeet. In addition, there was great competition from the Spanish and French that added to the urgency of securing tracts of land rich for trapping. Much of what we know of these early "mountain men" is centered around both facts and legends. Hugh Glass, Jedediah Smith, and Jim Bridger were three of the first actual white men who ventured into the Rocky Mountains and beyond. In THE REVENANT, we are given an exciting glimpse into a very early and virgin American West. It is no secret that Hugh Glass was a central figure at the time, and he was indeed attacked by a grizzly bear and left for dead by his party. Punke does such a marvelous job of weaving fact and fiction together, and he elaborates on this merger at the novel's end. What I found most fascinating about this moving saga were the rich backgrounds we are given involving the histories of the major characters. We are treated to accounts not only of Glass, but also of Bridger, Fitzgerald, Henry, and the French voyageurs. The descriptions of the bear ordeal, of Glass's stoic determination, of the Indian attacks, and of survival in the brutal wilderness itself were absolutely compelling. Punke's knowledge and visceral prose make for story telling at its finest. If you enjoy films like JEREMIAH JOHNSON and books like UNDAUNTED COURAGE or CROW KILLER, I believe you will find THE REVENANT to be a splendid read that is well worth your time....

65 of 73 people found the following review helpful. Compelling Summer Adventure Novel By A Customer Not only is The Revanant a compelling story about revenge, but it also is a story about the overwhelming human survival instinct, particularly in early frontier America. The historical story of Hugh Glass is amazing in and of itself, but The Revanant brings it to life. The book graphically describes the seemingly insurmountable obstacles faced by trapper Hugh Glass, first in trying to survive, then in seeking vengeance. You can almost feel Hugh Glass' shattered body.In addition to being a gripping story, The Revanant literally transports you to the wild, unpredictable American West of the 1820's. It is impeccably well researched with extensive and fascinating historical detail. This detail, combined with great writing and an incredible story results in a perfect adventure novel for any summer reading list.

81 of 92 people found the following review helpful. Punke delivers!! By A Customer Rarely do I finish a book and immediately want to read it again. This, however, was the case with The Revenant. It is a novel of revenge yet includes so much more. The usual predictablity of this genre was lost on Punke as he relives life in the early mountain west. The story is vivid and captivating; written in such a way that you feel personally involoved. Furhtermore, the ending will leave you pondering your own resolve...Truly a great read and a debut that suggests great things for Punke's future as a writer.

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