![]() ![]() I know Charlotte Lamb churned these buggers out and maybe she didn’t think this one through, because there were some perfectly good opportunities to make it work out better. I had trouble reconciling this so I have come up with the notion that the book is flawed. This book triggered me, right at the end too. I don’t normally like to do spoilers but hey, this time I have to. Emilie works for her grandfather and is essentially his heir. Yet she had some depth to her because she had nursed her dying mother and then rejected by her father after he married straight after her mother’s funeral.Īmbrose (great name!) is a banking man and makes money. All this boded well for me, despite the fact that the heroine was very young (half the hero’s age) and virginal etc. ![]() The hero’s father had been a drunk and violent towards his mother and him and his siblings. This is a Harlequin Mills & Boon and British author. This book had a lot going for it, particularly as the hero had a checkered past and the book discussed the conditions of the poor in Mexico, the picking over of dumps and the exploitation of kids. ![]() One that triggered me and the other that blew me away.įirst up was Haunted Dreams by Charlotte Lamb (1995). ![]() It’s been an interesting week of romance reading for me with two totally different books. ![]()
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