
This is not one of Michelle Reid's better stories. It's not totally bad, but just kind of blah. There's no life in these characters, IMO. Ms. Reid used the old Harlequin stand by, the heroine-has-to-help-her-brother-out-of-a-mess, to get these characters back together. (Sigh.) I much preferred THE PRICE OF A BRIDE, over this story.
Linda H. (lindahaddix) - , reviewed Lost in Love (Harlequin Presents, No 1665) on + 378 more book reviews
Someplace between heaven and hell...
Four years ago Guy Frabosa had hurt Marnie so badly that she vowed never to set eyes on him again and had divorced him in a blaze of pain and anger. He fought her, but she had a trump card and she was deperate enough to use it.
Now Guy held all the cards --Marnie needed his financial help and had little choice but to play by her ex-husband's rules. He demanded her body and soul, but the thought of returning to his side as his wife filled her with a raging hatred--made all the more consuming by her utterly wanton desire for his lovemaking.
Four years ago Guy Frabosa had hurt Marnie so badly that she vowed never to set eyes on him again and had divorced him in a blaze of pain and anger. He fought her, but she had a trump card and she was deperate enough to use it.
Now Guy held all the cards --Marnie needed his financial help and had little choice but to play by her ex-husband's rules. He demanded her body and soul, but the thought of returning to his side as his wife filled her with a raging hatred--made all the more consuming by her utterly wanton desire for his lovemaking.