The bride takes a groom

Lisa Berne

Book - 2018

Tired of her parents' plotting to marry her into the nobility, wealthy heiress Katherine Brooke offers Captain Hugo Penhallow a marriage of convenience, a practical arrangement that leads to far more than she ever dreamed of.

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FICTION/Berne, Lisa
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1st Floor FICTION/Berne, Lisa Due May 8, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Regency fiction
Romance fiction
Historical fiction
Published
New York, NY : Avon Books, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Lisa Berne (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
354 pages ; 17 cm
ISBN
9780062451828
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Katherine Brooke has been fooled by true love and is determined that that won't ever happen to her again. So when her old childhood friend Captain Hugo Penhallow, who has just returned home from war and is desperately seeking an heiress to wed, proposes, Katherine sees this as an opportunity to free herself from the matrimonial machinations of her parents. Of course, Katherine also has certain matrimonial conditions of her own, which Hugo must accept in exchange for her money. Fortunately, since neither is in love with the other, their union will be the perfect marriage of convenience. Everything starts out splendidly, until Katherine and Hugo discover they might actually have romantic feelings for one another, which makes their new marriage anything but convenient. With perfectly polished prose, a rare gift for creating superbly rendered characters, and a sense of wit that rivals Georgette Heyer at her best, Berne gifts romance readers with the third sterling addition to her not-to-be-missed, Regency-set Penhallow Dynasty series.--Charles, John Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Berne's marvelous third Penhallow Dynasty Regency (after The Laird Takes a Bride), reunited friends find that a hasty marriage leads to significant challenges. Capt. Hugo Penhallow hopes to marry well to restore his family's fortunes. He sets his sights on Katherine Brooke, a childhood friend. Katherine is not the amiable girl he remembers; she has succumbed to her parents' pressure to display the trappings of their wealth with her ostentatious dress, and is so eager to get out from under their stifling control that she breaks convention and proposes to Hugo. As Hugo and Katherine adjust to married life, she surprises him with glimpses into her caring nature and confuses him by first displaying a sudden eagerness for intimacy and then stifling it because she thinks he regrets their marriage. But Hugo discovers that she desires him and Katherine learns that she is worthy of his affection in a slow development that's beautifully written. Regency fans will love this forthright, intellectual heroine and affable, resourceful hero. Agent: Cheryl Pientka, Jill Grinberg Literary. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

When childhood friends--fortune hunter Hugo Penhallow and wealthy but oppressed heiress Katherine Brooke--decide to wed, neither can imagine what the future has in store for them or how marriage can save them.After having been wounded in Canada, Capt. Hugo Penhallow comes home to straitened circumstances and calls on his former playmate Katherine, who jumps on his arrival as salvation and asks him to marry her. Her rich parents are looking for an advantageous match, and while Hugo doesn't have a title, Penhallow is "an old and illustrious name that loomed large, extremely large, among the haut ton." Unfortunately, in the years since they last met, Katherine's parents have taken draconian measures to keep their lively daughter in check, and she's become an angry, suspicious young woman. Once married, Katherine retreats behind a protective screen of brittle hauteur, and the ever genial Hugo realizes he might regret his impulsive decision to marry her. A honeymoon visit to Hugo's cousin Gabriel, his lively wife, Livia (the couple from Berne's debut, You May Kiss the Bride), and Gabriel's formidable grandmother Henrietta, who takes Katherine under her wing, chips away at her insecurity, and once the couple heads to London for the season, the bride begins to wonder if there's hope for them after all. Startling news sends them back to Hugo's childhood home, where, surrounded by his large family, Katherine continues her journey of rediscovering her true self. Berne's third Penhallow title maintains the exquisite writing, lush emotion, and complex characters we've come to expect, this time with a heroine who is knocked back time and again but finds herself strengthened by the choices she makes, the people she helps along the way, and, to her pleasant surprise, the remarkable man beside her.An elegant, poignant, and joyful romance and a must-read for Regency fans.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.