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A Match Made In London

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Miss Rosalind Merriweather's life has been one of hardship and servitude since her late sister's ruination. Now a paid companion, her latest post brings her to London to watch over the daughter of a social climbing harridan. She vows to protect her charge—and her own heart—from rakes and libertines, the very type of man who destroyed her sister. This vow proves difficult when Sir Tristan Crosby, the epitome of all she despises, begins to show attention to the girl.
Tristan has spent decades perfecting his easygoing, charming persona to hide the damage done by years of abuse by his father. Finding he has a talent for matchmaking, he fills some of the emptiness inside him by helping the overlooked, shy women of London find true love. However, the latest young woman has a watchdog of a companion who seems to see beyond his careful façade to the flawed, uncertain soul he strives to hide from the world. Even worse, she affects him in ways no woman ever has.
But he will not give up his matchmaking, even for one such as her. What he does not expect is for Rosalind to be fired from her position because of it—nor that she will immediately find a position in his own household. When these two headstrong adversaries meet under one roof, will their attraction to one another lead to heartbreak, or have these two passionate souls finally met their match?
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    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2019
      Third in a historical romance series (The Viscount's Promise, 2018, etc.) about women who have been burned in love and the men who convince them to take a risk. Ever since her family was ruined by a nobleman who seduced and abandoned her older sister, Miss Rosalind Merriweather "had been passed around as a [paid] companion...like a plate of particularly unappetizing food at a party." Her latest charge is a painfully shy girl whose wealthy parents hope to marry into the nobility. Rosalind's sister's debauchery and subsequent death have made our heroine deeply skeptical of London society, especially of charming rogues like Sir Tristan Crosby. Rosalind's attempts to thwart Sir Tristan's attention to her charge bring them into contact, and he becomes intrigued by the tart-tongued woman from Staffordshire. Tristan's upbringing at the hands of a cruel father who far favored his half brother has made him feel like the worthless libertine Rosalind believes him to be. But Tristan has found a secret wellspring of happiness in his ability to use his charms to arrange suitable matches for young ladies like Rosalind's charge. Both Rosalind and Tristan have buried hurts which are slowly revealed as they begin to like and trust one another underneath their steady trading of barbs. At the same time, their growing attraction seems dangerous for them both. Britton's plot is motivated by a close study of the rules of the matchmaking season in Regency-era London society, and she writes with respect for the refinement of the time period. While Rosalind's stereotyping of all London's rich families can be fatiguing, she eventually grows to acknowledge everyone's humanity: "We are all like paper dolls, flat, garbed carefully, only showing what we wish for others to see. But within we are books' worth of stories and dramas, heartaches and joys." A sweet, emotional Regency romance with enough simmering passion and lively, intelligent dialogue to please fans of the genre.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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