The missus

E. L. James

Book - 2023

"Maxim Trevelyan, reluctant Earl of Trevethick, has pursued the woman he loves to the wilds of Albania. Having fought for and won her, he now has to wed her, at the sharp end of a shotgun. But can a reformed rake like Maxim ever make a good husband -- or will his own notorious reputation and the scandalous secrets of his aristocratic family destroy his newfound happiness? Alessia Demachi has defied and outwitted kidnappers and traffickers, and won the heart of the man she loves, but can she make this marriage work? Confronted by Maxim's lurid past, his forbidding family, and the looks and whispers of London's elite, will she ever be seen as Maxim's countess -- or will she always be his former cleaner? From the majestic m...ountains of Albania, through the rural idyll of the English countryside, to the shady glamour of contemporary London, The Missus is a spellbinding journey of love, longing, acceptance, and redemption"--

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Erotic fiction
Novels
Published
Naperville, Illinois : Bloom Books, an imprint of Sourcebooks [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
E. L. James (author)
Item Description
Sequel to: The mister.
Physical Description
458 pages : 21 cm
ISBN
9781728290270
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A reformed playboy settles into married life with his former maid. Maxim Trevelyan, a London playboy and newly minted Earl of Trevethick, fell in love with Alessia Demachi in the first book of the series, The Mister (2019). Alessia was trafficked from Albania and later kidnapped and rescued by Maxim. This book picks up immediately following those events, with Maxim and Alessia at her family's home in Albania, planning to marry. The plot focuses on domestic matters: planning the wedding ceremony, securing Alessia's citizenship status, and managing Maxim's problems with the Trevethick estate. The emotional arcs are simplistic and repetitive: Over and over again Maxim wonders how to keep his new wife happy, while Alessia worries that she isn't beautiful and cultured enough to satisfy such a renowned playboy. His family and former lovers disapprove of the match and try to disrupt the couple's happiness with undermining comments and petty schemes. After the pair returns to London, there is very little of interest to fuel the plot other than Alessia's sudden determination to find one of the younger girls who was trafficked with her. James' writing is choppy and discordant, shifting rapidly between narrators with only the difference in point of view--Maxim in first person and Alessia in third--to indicate a change in speaker. Maxim's voice is uncomfortably banal. Upon seeing his bride on their wedding day, he thinks, "Dude, don't get emotional." Even James completists looking for a last glimmer of Fifty Shades of Grey magic are bound to be disappointed. Simple and trite. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.