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A review by melstylensubstance
The Lovelocks of London: The Collection by Felicity Niven
5.0
Publishing the series as its own collection was just what I needed to read the series! I’m a big fan of the Bed Me Books, and it was only a matter of time to read Felicity Niven’s back list.
The first book is the story of Tommy and Harry (Harriet). It’s a marriage of convenience, but Tommy becomes such a wife guy it’s the best. It’s in this book we meet the pairings of the subsequent books. We get a little tease of the next book James and Catherine. And a small kernel of hope that Dr. Andrews will get his HEA also.
The second book - James and Catherine has age gap and some intrigue running throughout. Highly entertaining, even if Catherine’s mental monologue of “I’m so shameful” gets annoying after a while.
And finally, the one I was waiting for. Alasdair. He’s paired with Arabella after she suffers a scandal and moves to Scotland. And of all people, it’s HARRY who conspires to get them together. I mean, if they are pining for each other so blatantly that Harry notices, that says something. This one is a travel story, leading of course to forced proximity and pretending to be married. Alasdair is just the too pure for his own good hero that I deserve.
And the collection finishes off with a short story of Harry delivering her first child. James and Catharine come to help at delivery time, and of course Dr Alasdair is there too.
The first book is the story of Tommy and Harry (Harriet). It’s a marriage of convenience, but Tommy becomes such a wife guy it’s the best. It’s in this book we meet the pairings of the subsequent books. We get a little tease of the next book James and Catherine. And a small kernel of hope that Dr. Andrews will get his HEA also.
The second book - James and Catherine has age gap and some intrigue running throughout. Highly entertaining, even if Catherine’s mental monologue of “I’m so shameful” gets annoying after a while.
And finally, the one I was waiting for. Alasdair. He’s paired with Arabella after she suffers a scandal and moves to Scotland. And of all people, it’s HARRY who conspires to get them together. I mean, if they are pining for each other so blatantly that Harry notices, that says something. This one is a travel story, leading of course to forced proximity and pretending to be married. Alasdair is just the too pure for his own good hero that I deserve.
And the collection finishes off with a short story of Harry delivering her first child. James and Catharine come to help at delivery time, and of course Dr Alasdair is there too.