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Mass Market Paperback The Landlord's Black-Eyed Daughter Book

ISBN: 1402246315

ISBN13: 9781402246319

The Landlord's Black-Eyed Daughter

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$17.79
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Book Overview

When Rand Remington falls in love with Bess Wyndham, a successful author of Gothic romances, he ignores the suspicion that she'll betray him - again. Their adventures lead to Rand being put on trial... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Ride with the Highwayman

The Landlord's Black-Eyed Daughter is a powerful historical romance with captivating storytelling that gallops across country to a thrilling conclusion. The curtain opens on a dispirited and corrupt late 18th century England, where redcoat Rand Remington has returned from the American war with wounds on his body and soul. Saddened at the poverty that has spread across the nation, he has taken up a career of crime, robbing the rich and giving to the poor as a highwayman. Into his life at one "stand and deliver" moment coachside comes Elizabeth Wyndham, a bold and fiery woman of thirty, using her pen to try to regain her family's ancestral home through her successful Gothic fiction similar to the popular Ann Radcliffe's. Both Rand and Elizabeth sense an uneasy but compelling connection that binds them in a mutual destiny. Rand has flashbacks to a battle five hundred years before. For Elizabeth, he seems to be the reincarnation of the "raven-haired knight," a brooding Byronic figure who troubles her books as he reinvents himself in plot after plot. Far from an ideal pair, the dark man has cheated on his mate, and she has betrayed him. But the details are lost in the mists of time. Elizabeth is pursued by an enamored nobleman with a police background, and greed and lust embroil her and her highwayman in deaths and misadventure as they try to escape capture and realize their dream of a life far away from the poverty and corruption of England. Dennis invests her characters with a rich, full-blooded stock. Rand is no superhero, but a complex human being who must pause for rest and entertain the occasional self-doubt. His "Bonnie Bess" may have the heart of a racehorse, but she too has normal fears and foibles. Even the villains arouse pity as they are led by human frailty and often pardonable motives. The chapters are steeped in fascinating period lore. Quirky details like the unethical arts of horse trading keep the pages turning. Quaint country dialect (sheep = woolbirds) adds to the realism. Authentic depictions of places like Newgate Prison contain powerful descriptions and a fine eye for architecture. Whether riding across the evocative moors or powdering a wig, the scenes are set with care. The madness of King George hangs over the political scene like a pall, and even the Prince of Wales makes an appearance in a very funny episode. Anyone familiar with Noyes' poem "The Highwayman" will spot the analogy and worry about the fateful ending. But Dennis, once again aided by her meticulous research, pulls off an artful coup at the end. This clever book follows in the grand tradition of classics like Forever Amber. Maureen O'Hara would have made a perfect Bess. As for Rand, only Errol Flynn would do.

Must read!

I don't agree with the publishers weekly review. I think the book is captivating and definitely held my interest for the full 400 pages. It is a book that takes you out of every day life and into Elizabeth's world. I enjoyed reading about a strong but feminine woman whether she lives in past or present day. I strongly recommend this book if you are a historical romance fan. You won't regret it!

entertaining Georgian romance

In 1787 "Knights of the Road" highwayman John Randolph "Rand" Remington and gothic romance writer Elizabeth Wyndham meet in London for what both believes is the first time, but each swears they met before, but not know where or when. Rand wonders if somehow they are fated for another, but fears he offers Elizabeth nothing but heartache even as he begins to think the when is in a previous lifetime back in the thirteenth century. Elizabeth realizes that before she met Rand, the hero of her latest romance is a morphed version of him who was a genuine thirteenth century knight who died in combat. She has problems understanding how either came to her let alone how they consolidated.. Meanwhile, Lord Walter Stafford demands Elizabeth accept his suit; instead she picks Rand. Outraged by the affront an abashed Stafford insures the pair end up in Newgate awaiting the hanging of Rand to the humiliation of Elizabeth. This entertaining Georgian romance stars a post American Revolution Robin Hood with an author who seems as if she time traveled from the twenty-first century, which she did not. Still the story line is fast-paced and filled with an interesting seemingly reincarnation twist that freshens up the tale. Sub-genre fans will enjoy this delightful tale as history appears ready to repeat itself for this star-crossed couple unless she writes the most passionate pleading words of her life to persuade King George to pardon her Rand. Harriet Klausner
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