Today at Romantic
Crush Junkies Blog I am celebrating one of my very favorite authors. Regency historical romance author Vanessa
Kelly is wowing audiences with her latest in her Stanton Family series, HIS MISTLETOE BRIDE. It is my pleasure to
bring this beautiful written story and it's even more talented and wonderful
author to you.
I need to start
first with saying that Regency romance author Vanessa Kelly is a beautiful
writer and artist. I will try my best to
not wax poetically as I give brief adulations to Ms. Kelly’s October 2012 Zebra
release HIS MISTLETOE BRIDE. But, that
is a very tall order, considering it has to be one of the most magical stories
I have read this year. It takes a lot to
keep this reviewer up until the wee hours of the morning as the sun’s rays begin
to peek over morning dusk. HIS MISTLETOE BRIDE is filled with light hearted characters that will have you smiling and
cheering them on as you participate in this wonderful Holiday read.
Oh, HIS MISTLETOE BRIDE is a wonderful addition to the Holiday Seasonal reads. Myself, I would
recommend pulling this Vanessa Kelly gem again and again throughout the year to
relive this heart warming and enchanting love story.
Product Details
ISBN-13:
9781420114843
Publisher:
Kensington Publishing Corporation
Publication date:
10/2/2012
Format: Mass
Market Paperback
Pages: 352
Genre: Historical Romance
Era: Regency
Series: The Stanton Family #2
Book Heat: HOT
Book Rating: 4
Buy: Amazon or B&N
Overview
Blame It On The
Mistletoe...
When Major Lucas
Stanton inherited his earldom, he never dreamed his property would include the
previous earl's granddaughter. Phoebe Linville is a sparkling American beauty,
yes, but with a talent for getting into trouble. Witness the compromising
position that forced them into wedlock. Whisked away to Mistletoe Manor, his
country estate, it isn't long before she is challenging his rules--and
surprising him in and out of bed...
Phoebe has no
intention of bowing to Lucas's stubbornness even though he offers all that she
wants. His kisses and unexpected warmth are enticing, but Phoebe is determined
to show the earl of Merritt what real love is all about. And if that takes
twelve nights of delicious seduction by a roaring fire, she's more than willing
to reveal her gifts very slowly...
About the author
Vanessa Kelly is
an award-winning author who was named by Booklist, the review journal of the
American Library Association, as one of the “New Stars of Historical
Romance.” Her Regency-set historical
romances have been nominated for awards in a number of contests, and her second
book, Sex and The Single Earl, won the prestigious Maggie Medallion for Best
Historical Romance. Her latest book, My
Favorite Countess, was nominated for an RT Reviewers’ Choice Award for Best
Regency Historical Romance.
Vanessa spends
most of the year in Ottawa , Ontario with her husband, but she’s lucky enough
to spend some of the winter near lovely Amelia Island, Florida. When she’s not dreaming of plots for her next
Regency novel, she’s writing contemporary romances with her husband, under the
pen name of V.K. Sykes. Visit Vanessa at
www.vanessakelly.com
Read an Excerpt
His Mistletoe
Bride
"The maid led her
downstairs and through a simply ornamented entrance hall to the door of the
drawing room. “There, miss. They’re waiting for you.”
Phoebe nodded,
suddenly so nervous her knees shook. She
silently ordered the starch back into her muscles and opened the door. What she saw brought her up short.
Mrs. Tanner sat
in a low chair by the fireplace. A very
tall, broad shouldered man stood opposite her, on the other side of the
chimneypiece. He was very handsome—quite
the handsomest man Phoebe had ever seen.
And when his attention, narrowed and intense, jumped to her it struck
her with an almost physical force.
Alarm skittered
along her nerves. Absurdly, she had the
impulse to back out of the room as quickly as she could.
Silly. Why be afraid of someone you have never met?
But as they
stared at each other, she sensed some ill-defined peril, and she instinctively
knew something dreadful was upon her.
Mrs. Tanner rose
from her seat, momentarily splintering the tension. “Phoebe, please come in. This is a member of your grandfather’s
family, Major Lucas Stanton, come to welcome thee to London .”
Phoebe slowly
entered into the room, trying to shake the notion that she was approaching
something awful and irrevocable. The
guarded expression on Mrs. Tanner’s face did nothing to dispel that impression.
Major Stanton
took a step forward, looming—and looming seemed the only correct
description—over her. He was broad
across the chest and shoulders, and every part of him looked hard and muscular. Phoebe did not make a habit of dissecting the
male figure, but he wore a well-tailored dark coat, pale, skin tight breeches,
and tall leather boots, all of which showed off every line of his impressive
physique. Just looking at that brawny,
masculine strength made her body hum with tension.
Cheeks flushing,
she fixed her gaze on his face. She
found it disconcerting too, since his hard-cut, impassive features served as a
stark contrast to eyes the color of a stormy sea. The emotions she thought she perceived in
their depths struck her as dangerous as the gales that had bedevilled her trip
across the Atlantic .
“Major Stanton,”
said Mrs. Tanner, “This is Miss Phoebe Linville.”
Phoebe stared up
at him a moment longer, transfixed by his slashing cheekbones and the granite
line of his jaw. All the men she knew
were farmers and shopkeepers, simple men who dressed plainly and looked nothing
like this man. Next to them, he
resembled…well, she did not know what.
But she knew she had never met anyone like him, though they had yet to
exchange even a simple greeting.
His gaze, somber
and wary, turned to one of puzzlement, jolting her into motion. The poor man must think she was a wordless
half-wit.
Though Quakers
generally made it a point not to bow or curtsy before those of higher station,
she dipped low, ignoring Mrs. Tanner’s tsk of disapproval. Why risk offending the first relative coming
to greet her? “Major Stanton, thank you
for coming to meet me. It was kind you
to do so,” she said, offering her hand in greeting.
His big hand
closed around hers and he lifted it to his lips, brushing a lingering kiss
across her sensitive skin. The breath
seized in her throat. Quaker men did not
go around kissing hands, much less making a show of it.
Fortunately, he
returned her hand and her lungs recommenced function.
“Phoebe,” said
Mrs. Tanner, sounding horrified, “please sit.”
Her friend nudged
her to a sturdy, brown-colored sofa next to the fireplace. With a severe nod, Mrs. Tanner indicated to
the major that he should take the seat facing them. He did not bother to repress a low sigh as he
carefully settled on a small caned chair that gave an alarming creak in
response. The sofa would have been a
more appropriate choice for his large frame, but Mrs. Tanner clearly intended
to punish him for his forward behavior.
“Major Stanton,
how is my grandfather?” Phoebe asked impulsively. “Did he ask you to fetch me?”
The swift glance
he exchanged with Mrs. Tanner brought Phoebe’s anxiety rushing back. Its chokehold tightened when the older woman
reached over and took her hand in a comforting clasp.
“Phoebe, thee
must prepare for unfortunate news. But I
ask thee to remember that the Father’s hand is in all things, and that he will
watch over thee always.”
Fear swept
through her. “What are you talking
about?”
When Mrs. Tanner
hesitated, Phoebe shook off her restraining hand and jumped up. The major rose immediately.
“Please, sir,”
she implored. “Take me to my
grandfather.”
Compassion
softened the grim lines of his face. He
struck her as a man not much given to that tender emotion, so whatever the
cause it must be dire.
He stepped
closer, reaching out to take her hand in a gentle grip. “Miss Linville, you must sit.” He had a firm, deep voice that held a
compelling note of authority. As it
washed over her, she had to resist the impulse to automatically obey. He smiled, as if to soothe her, and one
finger stroked lightly over the back of her hand. “I’m certain you should have a cup of tea
before we have any further discussion.”
Unnerved by his
touch, she pulled her hand away. “I do
not want a cup of tea. I want you to
tell me about my grandfather.”
He ran a
thoughtful gaze over her face, as if taking her measure. “Very well.
Miss Linville, it grieves me to inform you that your grandfather—my
great uncle, Lord Merritt—died from an infection some weeks ago. I didn’t write to you, since my letter would
not have arrived prior to your departure.
I hope you will believe I would have spared you this trip, if it at all
possible.”
A strange buzzing
noise arose in her ears, then her knees buckled and she sank onto the
sofa. Her heart throbbed in her chest,
straining against the shock. For a
terrible moment, she could not draw a breath.
Mrs. Tanner
gasped her name and Major Stanton let out a low curse. Swiftly, he came down on one knee before her
and gripped her shoulders, holding her steady.
Until he touched her, Phoebe had not realized she needed someone to keep
her upright.
“Hold her while I
get some water,” exclaimed Mrs. Tanner as she rushed from the room.
“Steady on, Miss
Linville,” Major Stanton murmured in her ear.
“Just lean against me.”
Coming up onto
the sofa, he eased her into his embrace, resting her head against his broad
chest. As if controlled by some unseen
force, her eyelids fluttered shut as, for the first time in her life, she found
herself in the arms of a man other than her brother or father. Her morals registered a faint objection, but
her body wanted nothing other than to collapse against that solid wall, her
cheek nestling comfortably against the soft wool fabric of his coat. Tumult swirled in her brain, but his gentle
embrace staved off the screeching panic that hovered at the edge of thought.
The door
opened. Footsteps hurried across the
floorboards, as Mrs. Tanner rustled up to them with a glass of water in her
hand. “Major, thee must allow me to tend
to Miss Linville. Please let her sit
up.”
Phoebe flinched
at the note of censure in her friend’s voice.
Mrs. Tanner had every right to be offended because Phoebe had no business
clinging to a man, no matter what the circumstances. But she could not help shrinking further into
his embrace. Her stunned brain had
latched onto the idea that as long as she remained in his arms she would be
safe, that all the hurtful things in the world could not harm her.
Ridiculous,
whispered the voice of reason. She
started to pull away, but Major Stanton gently adjusted his hold to keep her
close. Phoebe had to bite down on the
whimper of relief that almost escaped her lips.
“I assure you,
Mrs. Tanner,” he said, “I will release my cousin as soon as I know she won’t
keel over in a dead faint.”
Phoebe
frowned. She never fainted. And now that her wits were slowly returning,
she felt the first flush of humiliation that she had allowed a perfect stranger
to hold her so intimately. Pushing
herself upright, she began to withdraw from his arms. For a second he resisted, keeping her fast in
his embrace. And, for a second, she did
not want him to let go."
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5 comments:
I never read any of Vanessa's book, but I'm a big fan of historical books and her book cover is sooooooooo beautiful....
I've not had a chance, yet, to read any of Vanessa's books, though I have several on my list.
Haven't read any of the author's books yet.
I haven't read any of Vanessa's books yet.
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Yüz Germe
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