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Mass Market Paperback To Have and to Hold Book

ISBN: 0451405358

ISBN13: 9780451405357

To Have and to Hold

(Book #2 in the Wyckerley Trilogy Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

After spending years in prison for a crime she did not commit, Rachel Wade accepts the proposal of cynical Sebastian Verlaine, Viscount D'Aubrey, who offers her parole in exchange for becoming his... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Terrible

Just can't get past the r*pe CHAPTER. It was a whole chapter. He even says that its SA and does it to her again after he discovers her history with SA. And there's no inner dialogue of regret from him at this point or attraction from her. The rest of the book just doesnt make up for this.

Powerful, sensual, original - WHAT A DISCOVERY!!

To Have and To Hold is my first novel to read by Patricia Gaffney and it will certainly not be my last. This was such a fantastic book in so many ways! Not only is the storyline highly unusually for romance writing, it is also very engrossing. Both leads are written with a great amount of depth and progress beyond all standards of typical romance character growth. This is a novel that you will make time to keep reading because its intriguing narrative just gets better with each page.Sebastian Verlaine, a viscount and soon to be an earl, has recently inherited a country estate near the village of Wyckerly. As part of his new duties, he decides to adjudicate some of the local cases - only out of curiosity - not out of any sense of obligation. He is a jaded and disillusioned hero, bored with life and sinking further into depravity. He comes complete with many of the "neglected childhood" haunts typical of many dark romance heroes. But most of the similarities end there. This is a story of his redemption.Rachel Wade is a country gentleman's daughter who has spent ten years in prison for the murder of her husband. Prison life has left her defeated and she seems to be just a shell of a woman. No one has stood by her during her imprisonment and she has no one to turn to once she is released. Repeatedly denied employment and robbed of her "start up" funds, she has no place to go. She is brought before a court of sorts (English nineteenth style) in the village of Wyckerly for vagrancy. It seems she is headed for a lifetime at a workhouse since she cannot provide for herself. Then a local viscount, sitting on the bench at her hearing, decides he will save her. He announces he will give her the position of his housekeeper. This is also a story of Rachel's rebirth.Sebastian doesn't believe there is much good left in him. If any of his deeds come close to respectable, he immediately denies it. Although he finds himself defending and helping Rachel, he knows the real reasons for his seemingly altruistic actions. He is bored with the world and she can offer him a diversion. He wants to dominate her, defeat her, and attempt to break apart her protective shell. He sees it purely as a source of entertainment. And, of course, she may be hired as his housekeeper but he intends for her to be his mistress. For the first portion of the book, he truly is as miserable as he envisions himself.Even at his worse, Sebastian is a delectable hero. He does everything he plans with Rachel and in doing so, unknowingly aids her recovery. He also begins to sense some kindness in himself - but that can't be. He is past saving. So he attempts to show himself to be even more depraved. But it's not working. Rachel responds to his kindness and is gaining some self-confidence in her new position as his housekeeper. Oh, imagine this - Sebastian may have to admit to himself that he is actually doing something for someone else for the right reasons.Rachel and

The best romance novel I've ever read - still

Four years after first reading it I this still love this book just as much, and ther romance website AAR has done a survey of its readers on their favorites among Gaffney's novels, and this book came in in #1. Updating my review from March of 1999, which 20 of 22 people found helpful: This is my favorite romance novel; it is also one of the darkest love stories I've ever read. An extraordinary book unlike anything you'll ever read, "To Have and to Hold" is beautifully written and breaks new ground for the romance genre, but is not for those who like their romances sweet. It is the middle book in Gaffney's Wyckerly trilogy (begun in "To Love & to Cherish" and completed with "Forever & Ever") but it also stands on its own. This was the first book of Gaffney's that I read and I immediately looked for the rest of them; none of them were anything like it, although she's a wonderful writer. The hero is by far the most complex and morally ambiguous character I have seen in popular fiction outside of Anne Rice's vampire books. Rachel and Sebastian meet after she has been released from ten harrowing years in prison for a crime she did not commit and is about to be sent back to prison for vagrancy. Sebastian is bored, previleged, and beginning to cross the line from decadence to corruption. He rescues her at the hearing and offers her a position as his "housekeeper," meaning mistress. She accepts out of desperation. Sebastian soon finds himself obssessed with his reserved housekeeper and responds by tormenting Rachel psychologically and sexually. Just when I was afraid to read anymore the story did a stunning 180-degree turn (I don't want to give it away). Suffice it to say that "To Have and to Hold" is dramatic, suspenseful, harrowing, intensely erotic, and deeply moving. You have not encountered a love-hate relationship in a romance until you've read this one. What's more, the quality of Gaffney's prose is far above 99.9% of the authors in the romance field. To quote Susan Elizabeth Phillips from the back cover: "An emotional roller coaster, complete with a dark, tortured hero, a complex heroine, and sex scenes so charged...I was riveted."

dark, somewhat disturbing and absolutely wonderful!

I had not ever heard of this author until recenly when I came across her while perusing a listmania on favorite romances on this site. I was immediately intrigued by the plot and decided to buy it. I am so glad I did! This is a wonderful romance full of darkness and love and intrigue.Sebastian Verlaine inherits the title of viscount from a cousin and moves to the village of Wyckerley not to take his newly acquired responsibility seriously but simply because he's bored with the aimlessness of his life. One drunken night he's talked into acting as magistrate and this is where he meets Rachel Wade, who was brought up on charges of indigence. She is a murderess who was paroled after having served ten years in prison for killing her husband. Sebastian is intrigued and attracted to her and offers her employment as a "housekeeper" not out of kindness but basically because he thinks it will be amusing to have someone around who's completely helpless at his beck and call. Of course he also plans to make her his mistress. Rachel is completely at his mercy and she knows it. However, she no longer cares very much about anything. She has been in prison since she was eighteen for a crime she didn't commit. Her accounts of the brutality and the cruelties she was subjected to in prison made me cringe. She doesnt care one way or another what happens to her as long as she doesn't have to go back to prison. Sebastian is selfish and mean, completely unlikeable throughout the first part of the book but by the end I was left totally breathless at how the characters, especially Sebastian, changed and matured before my very eyes.This, I believe, is what makes both the book and the author brilliant. She was able to show through poignant, sometimes disturbing scenes that love is powerful enough to change even the most jaded, cynical and hopeless of people. Overall this is an excellent read.I can't wait to read the rest of the books on this author's backlist. Highly recommended. :)

Wish I Had More Stars to Give

This is the best effort of one of the romance genre's finest writers and on my top five list of best romance novels ever.I don't know that I have ever encountered such rich character development---the story is almost entirely character driven. Sebastian Verlaine is no cardboard cut out of a hero. He is infinitely complex with the potential to realize either extreme of good or evil. The book opens at a crossroads in his life where he must decide which path he will follow. Rachel is the playing field for his experiments. Sebastian's moral ambiguity is fascinating and you will love him even when he is at his worst.Rachel is an amazing heroine no less richly drawn than Sebastian. Ms. Gaffney has done an excellent job exploring the character of a woman locked away for ten years forbidden even to speak to another person. Rachel is by no means a pathetic character, however. Her strength and the inner core of integrity that sustains her is one of the most subtle pieces of development I've seen. Additionally the cast of supporting characters are vividly drawn. They have real lives and individual personalities ---never serving just as "props" for the main story. They add a richness and veracity to the tale that is sadly lacking in many books today.To Have and To Hold is a shining example of how very little "action" can be completely engrossing particularly when so many romance novels today seem determined to toss the reader from one outrageous happening to the next. This story reaches right into your gut and grabs hold of you. It is a rough ride at times and the scenery gets a bit dark, but it is a journey well worth the undertaking.

The best romance book I've ever read

This is my favorite romance novel; it is also one of the darkest love stories I've ever read. An extraordinary book unlike anything you'll ever read, "To Have and to Hold" is beautifully written and breaks new ground for the romance genre, but is not for those who like their romances sweet. It is the middle book in Gaffney's Wyckerly trilogy (begun in "To Love & to Cherish" and completed with "Forever & Ever")but it also stands on its own. This was the first book of Gaffney's that I read and I immediately looked for the rest of them; none of them were anything like it, although she's a wonderful writer. The hero is by far the most complex and morally ambiguous character I have seen in popular fiction outside of Anne Rice's vampire books. Rachel and Sebastian meet after she has been released from ten harrowing years in prison for a crime she did not commit and is about to be sent back to prison for vagrancy. Sebastian is bored, previleged, and beginning to cross the line from decadence to corruption. He rescues her at the hearing and offers her a position as his "housekeeper," meaning mistress. She accepts out of desperation. Sebastian soon finds himself obssessed with his reserved housekeeper and responds by tormenting Rachel psychologically and sexually. Just when I was afraid to read anymore the story did a stunning 180-degree turn (I don't want to give it away). Suffice it to say that "To Have and to Hold" is dramatic, suspenseful, harrowing, intensely erotic, and deeply moving. You have not encountered a love-hate relationship in a romance until you've read this one. What's more, the quality of Gaffney's prose is far above 99.9% of the authors in the romance field. To quote Susan Elizabeth Phillips from the back cover: "An emotional roller coaster, complete with a dark, tortured hero, a complex heroine, and sex scenes so charged...I was riveted."
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