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Book Reviews of The Bridal Season

The Bridal Season
The Bridal Season
Author: Connie Brockway
ISBN-13: 9780739421499
ISBN-10: 0739421492
Publication Date: 2001
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 8

3.9 stars, based on 8 ratings
Publisher: Dell Publishing
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

4 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed The Bridal Season on + 75 more book reviews
This book doesn't have a dust jacket.
reviewed The Bridal Season on + 191 more book reviews
Regency romance. Main character posing as a wedding planer, nobody suspecting her charade except Sir Elliot March. Fun entanglements and great ending.
bookworm4ever avatar reviewed The Bridal Season on + 4 more book reviews
A schemer by necessity, Letty Potts Has gotten into a few fixes in her 25 years, but she faces the worst one of all when trying to go straight. Narrowly escaping the wrath of her partner in crime, she finds herself with nothing but the gown she's wearing and a train ticket belonging to another women. Posing as wedding planner "Lady Agatha," Letty travels to a backwater town to arrange the nuptials of a young society bride. Amid the dizzying whirl of preparations, no one suspects her charade--except Sir Elliot March. The sensual aristocrat had foresworn love, but Letty reawakens his passion--leading him into scandal.
reviewed The Bridal Season on + 3389 more book reviews
Reviewer: Chris Cummings (OH) -
A saucy heroine, a mouthwatering hero, a charming community, fun and wit and passion, this one has it all. Letty and Elliot are both immediately likable and delightfully original. Letty, raised as music hall performer, seeks to escape her increasingly nefarious boyfriend and finds a ticket to a tiny town called Little Bidewell, where she is mistaken for the eccentric Lady Agatha, duke's daughter-cum-wedding planner extraordinaire. Letty, whose luck had just run out, can't resist such an Opportunity and gets swept up in what begins as a rather benign deception. Soon, however, she becomes entangled in the lives of the charming Little Bidewell residents, including the sexy, chivalrous Sir Elliot.
Elliot is neither rogue nor rake, but a true gentleman; however, don't be put off if you thought only bad boys could be sexy! He's one of Brockwell's most irresistable creations!

The story is chock full of Brockway's delightfully witty dialogue, and there are many humorous moments, but what begins as an undeniable, potent attraction between Letty and Elliot becomes a heart-wrenching and most romantic unrequited (almost) love.

If you're open to something a little different but still demand great, passionate romance, try this one! I doubt you'll be disappointed!