The Second Lady Emily (Signet Regency Romance)

| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.50 (986 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 0451195183 |
| Format Type | : | paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 96 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2015-04-04 |
| Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
While visiting an historic mansion, a beautiful woman is rendered unconscious, only to awaken as a famous lady of English aristocracy in 1812, who had died suddenly, never wedding her intended. Allison Lane is a winner of Romantic Times Reviewer's Choice Award for Best First Regency Allison Lane is the beloved author of The Prodigal Daughter, The Earl's Revenge, The Impoverished Viscount, and The Rake's Rainbow. Posing as the Regency lady, she is determined to give this co
"A Five Star Book" according to R. Crane. This is my first Allison Lane novel and I was utterly enchanted by her excellent writing style, interesting characters, original plotline, and fast paced action. This is one Regency romance where the author does not feel compelled to repeat the same agonizing thoughts in fifty different ways, but actually moves the plot with new thoughts and new actions. I found it hard to stop reading, and it is a short quick read. I hope her other books are as wonderful as this one.. I really liked this story. First of all the heroine name is Cherlynn not Candace(what book were you people reading)? This is a story about a woman who has had alot of bad breaks, is Not beautiful nor is she very successful at her chosen profession. Who has the opportunity,at first against her will, to make right a great wrong by going back in time. While it's a shame that she wasn't accepted for how she looked or what she was in the present she has a second chance to take the "essence" of what she is and repackage it in a more desirable form. I LOVED her intellegence and the way she was able to s. Unconvincing Dr W. Richards I bought this book for the novelty of the premise and the goodreviews on this site. However, I just can't concur with the otherreviewers' opinions of it. The 'setup' elements of it just seemed utterly ridiculous. The contemporary heroine feeling compelled to bid for the Lordship of the Manor (which is *not* the same as an aristocratic title, and would have nothing to do with the queen or Buckingham Palace, so that element of the story is just incredible).When Candace/Emily ends up back in the eighteenth century, the story gets even less credible. The hero spending hours
