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Sunday’s Child a Regency Novel by Rosemary Morris
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Available from www.amazon.com for $1.22 from the 16th March to the 23rd March
https://www.amazon.com/Sunday’s-Child-ebook/dp/B01JHH48KY
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sunday’s-Child-ebook/dp/B01JHH8KY
Sunday’s Child is sensual but contains no explicit sex.
5.0 out of 5 starsA Sprightly Regency Romance
By Lindsay Townsend on 7 March 2017
“When Georgianne, the appealing, enterprising heroine of 'Sunday's Child' first encounters Rupert Tarrant, she is fourteen. Georgianne thinks even then the tall, blond handsome soldier is the kind of man she hopes to marry one day.
At seventeen, when they meet again, Georgianne is in mourning for her brothers and father, lost in the Napoleonic wars. She is now wary of becoming romantically involved with a military man, despite the limited life that an unmarried woman is forced to lead in the 1800s.
However, as the novel superbly shows, a young woman without a father or brother to protect her interests is vulnerable to predatory males. None is more predatory than Lord Pennington, a truly odious Earl, whose relentless pursuit of Georgianne is aided by the conventions and morals of the time.
Rupert Tarrant meanwhile is haunted by the violent death of his betrothed and is torn between remaining single to grieve and marrying to provide an heir to his recently acquired estate.
That Georgianne and Tarrant should marry - she for protection, he for an heir - seems an ideal compromise. But what chance is there for love to grow between them?
This is a flowing romance, full of intrigue and incident, with rich details of Regency fashion, food and furniture. There are frost fairs and Nabobs, Lord Byron's poetry, kidnappers and ruffians, attempted blackmail and a heroine who can shoot.
The whole convenient marriage trope is treated with tender realism. With their careful treatment of each other and their striving to understand their differing experiences, Georgianne and Tarrant thoroughly deserve their eventual happy ever after.
A sweet treat.”
Sunday’s Child is sensual but contains no explicit sex.
Sunday’s Child Heroines born on different days of the week Book 1 published by Books We Love is available from:
Rosemary Morris
Multi-Published Historical Novelist
Regency Novels
Sunday’s Child Heroines born on different days of the week Book 1
Monday’s Child. Heroines born on different days of the week. Book 2
Tuesday’s Child. Heroine’s born on different days of the week. Book 3
False Pretences
Early 18th Century Novels
Far Beyond Rubies
Tangled Love
The Captain and The Countess
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