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bookrambler 's review for:
A Duke Changes Everything: The Duke's Den
by Christy Carlyle
This was nice but I was bored most of the time.
Nick who's the Duke starts off the book as a gambling den owner. He was a second son and also hated by his father. Of course, fate would now make him the Duke of Tremayne.
Mina is the Steward..er..Stewardess of Enderley. Being a female steward and all, she's worried what the new Duke will do with her.
When Nick arrives at Enderley, he wants nothing to do with the crumbling heap of an estate but Mina is determined to make him change his mind. Along the way, Nick and Mina's attraction grows and I love their conversations with each other. The hero is scarred both physically and mentally; and there were so many times that I wished 'this man should immediately visit a therapist'. Mina also has conflicts of her own; besides being a female in a male dominated profession in those times, she is always reminded to behave in a ladylike manner.
Suffive to say, that there's fewer external conflicts than internal ones and this failed to tie up the narrative together neatly. Overall, this was a nice read but not something I'll outright recommend.
Nick who's the Duke starts off the book as a gambling den owner. He was a second son and also hated by his father. Of course, fate would now make him the Duke of Tremayne.
Mina is the Steward..er..Stewardess of Enderley. Being a female steward and all, she's worried what the new Duke will do with her.
When Nick arrives at Enderley, he wants nothing to do with the crumbling heap of an estate but Mina is determined to make him change his mind. Along the way, Nick and Mina's attraction grows and I love their conversations with each other. The hero is scarred both physically and mentally; and there were so many times that I wished 'this man should immediately visit a therapist'. Mina also has conflicts of her own; besides being a female in a male dominated profession in those times, she is always reminded to behave in a ladylike manner.
Suffive to say, that there's fewer external conflicts than internal ones and this failed to tie up the narrative together neatly. Overall, this was a nice read but not something I'll outright recommend.