The duke A devil's duke novel

Katharine Ashe

Book - 2017

When a woman from his past arrives at his castle in the Highlands, demanding answers, Gabriel Hume, known to society as the Devil's Duke, embarks on a game of wit and desire with Lady Amarantha Vale to keep her from learning his darkest secret.

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FICTION/Ashe Katharin
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Subjects
Genres
Regency fiction
Romance fiction
Historical fiction
Published
New York, New York : Avon Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Katharine Ashe (-)
Physical Description
398 pages ; 17 cm
ISBN
9780062641724
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Everyone is simply wrong. Amarantha Garland knows deep in heart that Gabriel Hume, Duke of Loch Irvine, is no murderer. Six years ago, Amarantha Vale met Gabriel while she was traveling to Jamaica to marry her fiancé, the Reverend Paul Garland. Surviving a hurricane while on board ship first brought Amarantha and Gabriel together, and the two furthered their acquaintance in Kingston. But soon Gabriel was given a new commission, and Amarantha married Paul. Now a widow, Amarantha has arrived in Scotland hoping to find a missing young woman only to discover that several other young ladies have disappeared in the area. Almost everyone believes that Gabriel the Devil Duke is responsible, but can Amarantha get Gabriel to trust her with the truth? Discerning readers who yearn for a lushly written historical romance that delivers a compelling plot firmly rooted in the social issues of the time, marvelously complex characters, vividly etched settings, and plenty of deliciously sensual passion need look no further than Ashe's latest Devils Duke book, following The Earl (2016), a romance that Kathleen Woodiwiss herself would be proud to have written.--Charles, John Copyright 2017 Booklist

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

Ashe's enjoyable third Devil's Duke novel (after The Pirate and I) features two bold adventurers: Gabriel Hume, a captain in the British Royal Navy and second son of a duke, and Lady Amarantha Vale, daughter of an earl. Believing herself in love, Amarantha follows her fiancé, Rev. Paul Garland, a condescending missionary, to Jamaica. There, a hurricane traps her for a night in a cellar with Gabriel, who begins courting her. Later, mistakenly believing Gabriel perished at sea, Amarantha commits to an unsatisfactory marriage with Paul, but within five years he's died and she returns to Scotland a widow. Once reunited, Gabriel and Amarantha engage in spirited banter, each keeping secrets and resisting the other, while the spark between them reignites, culminating in passionate and playful sex scenes. The novel adroitly addresses social justice issues of the time: Gabriel, now a reclusive, feared duke, secretly shelters abused (and highly independent, self-governing) women on one of his estates, while Amarantha helps her Jamaican friend Tabitha write a memoir about fleeing the threat of slavery. Subplots include the development of romances between two appealing interracial couples. Likable lovers, witty dialogue, intriguing supporting characters, and a zippy pace result in a lively page-turner. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Library Journal Review

Seventeen-year-old Amarantha Vale is so taken with gentleman preacher Paul Garland in 1817 that she follows him from England to Kingston, Jamaica, where he has established a congregation. Still only betrothed, Amarantha has a lot to learn about missionary life as well as her new location as she finds herself trapped in a storage cellar when a hurricane roars through. Her only salvation is a sailor who also takes shelter there. Lt. Gabriel Hume holds her hand during the worst of it, and though she calls him Shark Bait, the two form a bond beyond basic humanity. Fast-forward to 1822, and the now widowed Amarantha sets sail for Scotland in search of her friend Penny, a freedwoman who was Paul's half-sister. Her quest leads her to the Duke of Loch Irvine, none other than Gabriel Hume, the self-same Devil's Duke involved with the disappearance of several young women. Verdict Ashe (The Rogue) delivers the truth behind the notorious Devil's Duke while covering such issues as colonial slavery, women's rights, domestic abuse, and back-stabbing business practices. While immediate truth-telling would have led our protagonists more directly to their happy ever after, this multilayered story would have been the poorer for it. For libraries where historical romance is popular and for Ashe's fans.-Bette-Lee Fox, Library Journal © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A devilish duke and a missionary's widow form an unlikely pair. From the age of 8, Amarantha Vale knows exactly whom she'll marry; unfortunately, at 17, she mistakenly thinks she's found him. Her engagement to the young missionary carries her across the ocean to Jamaica; it also sends her careening into the decidedly nonmissionary Lt. Gabriel Hume in the middle of her first hurricane. After a short time, just as they admit their feelings for each other, Gabe is ordered to command a ship, causing Amarantha to marry the patronizing reverend. Years later, widowed, she reverses her journey across the Atlantic in search of Gabe, now the Duke of Loch Irvine, known throughout the Scottish highlands as the Devil's Duke. Rumors abound about the possibly homicidal duke, but she doesn't believe them, and upon meeting again, the couple finds that they are both older, wiser, and still mad for each other. In a genre where love stories usually unfold over the course of a single season, this story, which begins with the couple's meeting in 1817 and ends happily in 1823, is unusually complex, and delightfully so. Ashe's (Captive Bride, 2017, etc.) thorough research enlivens corners of the Regency era unseen by London society and creates many moments for both Gabe and Amarantha to engage in small individual efforts to combat the evils of slavery and misogyny. Not that their passion is neglected; the longer-than-average story allows ample time for the bedroom, and in great detail. Readers who enjoyed the first two titles in The Devil's Duke series will be delighted to find that this entry is the best of the series so farbut new readers can jump right in. This decidedly un-English Regency romance will win over historical fiction readers from all corners. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.