
Barbara S. (
barbsis) - Netcong, NJ wrote on 7/17/2009...
Fleurette is a widow making her way in the world by owning and running a carriage manufacturing company. On vacation, she admires a statue of a Celtic warrior and suddenly it appears in her garden.
Killian is your typical medieval dictator. He is forever telling Fleurette what she can and should do. Of course, this infuriates her and they have many rows. He is a royal pain in the butt but within the last few chapters she gives in to his charms and falls in love. It's a cute story but the hero is a little too much. Any normal woman would give him the heave ho and be done with it

Jenean W. (
jenean) wrote on 1/23/2007...
Seemed to drag on a bit. Not as good as her other stuff, but still and entertaining read.
Pretty good read I enjoyed it.

Glenda V. (
Glenda) wrote on 11/18/2005...
From the inside front cover:
Since escaping a dangerously abusive marriage, Fleurette Eddings, Lady Glendowne, has reveled in her freedom - turning the heads of the ton with her unrestrained enjoyment of life. But her extravagant purchase of the statue of a fourteenth-century Celtic mercenary seems beyond the pale, even for the vivacious young beauty - especially when a powerful, breathtaking, and oddly familiar stranger mysteriously enters her world....
The warm caress of an exquisite lady has awakened Killian, Sir Hiltsglen, the legendary "Black Celt" from his centuries-long slumber. To end the curse that encased his spirit in cold stone, his destiny is now bound to the infuriating lass who set him free - and who tempts the great warrior with a smoldering sensuality that inflames his barbarian desires. For Fleurette is hiding a dark secret and is in dire need of a champion - and Killian's mission could be compromised by an unbidden love that transcends time.