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So In Love : Book Five of The Highland Lords

So In Love : Book Five of The Highland Lords

List Price: $5.99
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Sad but good read
Review: This is about Jeanne du Marchand and Douglas MacRae. They were young lovers in France (she was 16, he was 17). She became pregnant and was blissfully happy until her father found out. He sent her away told Douglas she didn't want to see him again and had left because she was pregnant with his child. She gave birth to their child, who was immediately taken away from her by force, and sent to a convent where they beat her for her sins lived in misery thinking of her daughter and Douglas. Douglas found their daughter, barley alive, and hated Jeanne because he thought she abandoned her.
Ten years later, they meet again.

This book was hard to read at some parts. It was heartwrenching. All that Jeanne and Douglas went through was terrible. I got so angry at some points because they didn't deserve what happened to them. I'm not usually big on books with the Big Misunderstanding, but this one was good. It made me sad, but I don't regret buying it and I recommend it. If you're not into book with the big misunderstanding, I would not get this

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Storyline was Great
Review: I can't believe people want this storyline to end. Each McRae is unique and part of a loving family I enjoy reading about. They each have their own story, so there's no sameness to me. I've read nearly everything by Ranney and I enjoyed this book, too. This was another one I found hard to put down.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Yeah for the secret baby plot
Review: I gotta say those are words I never thought I'd say (or write), but Ms. Ranney makes it work. When I got to the secret baby story line I groaned, but then it was so charmingly handled, and so nicely plotted that I had to admit I liked it. I can't wait to read more by the author, and I highly recommend this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Well worth my time and money
Review: I'm a sucker for the Georgian period (which is why I so love Jo Beverley). It was wonderful to find another writer who handles this period so masterfully. On top of her through understanding of the history, she'd simply a great writer. Her plot is a little too convoluted for my tastes (but I think that's cause it's part of a family series, and she has to fill us in on so much back story), but I still found myself completely sucked in and surprised at how quickly I finished the book. Forget about the dense tomes that Gabalbon writes and read this instead!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Will this storyline ever end?
Review: I'm sorry, but as I had thorougly enjoyed Ranney's novels in the past, I have endured all five of the MacRae novels. I kept hoping that a gem will emerge. No such luck. The first was okay, the second so-so and so forth.
Please, please, please let the MacRae storyline end now. She hints in comments to the readers at the end that this is the end of the storyline...PLEASE say it is!!!
The novel was a bit contrived, drawn out, and yes, as one reviewer noted, should have ended much earlier. As a short story or novella, it might have worked. As 366+ in small print, it doesn't.

I'm sure the majority will disagree, and maybe I'm being too harsh and need to later give the novel one more chance, but more than likely it's to the used book store.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: So Not My Favorite
Review: If you hate books in which the plot centers around "A Big Misunderstanding", this is *definitely* not the book for you. Jeanne du Marchand, a French nobleman's daughter, and Douglas McRae meet as teenagers in Paris before the French Revolution and secretly fall in love. When Jeanne discovers that she is pregnant, she tells her father who, instead of allowing the lovers to marry as they wish, perversely separates them and sends his only child off to live in a convent (seemingly forever) after the birth of her child. Jeanne and Douglas are told by Jeanne's nasty father and his equally nasty housekeeper/mistress that each has abandoned the other and their child. Why on *earth* they would believe this (especially given the sources) and why they would take *forever* to question each other about it when they are reunited (through an unlikely coincidence) in Scotland years later is the most frustrating aspect of the book.
The characters are well-drawn (although Jeanne is a bit too passive for my taste, presumably due to having had all the spirit beaten out of her during her long years in the convent) and the writing is good, but to my mind the rather implausible plot and especially the lack of communication between the hero and heroine undermine the story. I had trouble believing that two people who had so little faith in each other and who talked to each other so *little* could really be in love. Also unbelievable is the concept that Douglas would hire his child's own (he believes, *faithless*) mother to be her governess and then start up an affair with the presumptive governess-to-be. (Baffling behavior for a supposedly devoted single father...)
In summary, this story did not really work for me (and I am a *big* fan of angsty romance and not totally opposed to the *big misunderstanding* as a plot device, as long as it makes a little bit of sense.) I absolutely *loved* Karen Ranney's book, "After the Kiss", so perhaps this book is a fluke.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: engaging regency romance
Review: In 1782 Paris, Jeanne du Marchand loves her Scottish boyfriend Douglas Macrae and he loves her. They plan to marry, but her irate father learns she is pregnant. He informs her that her lover left for Scotland and sends his whore daughter to a convent with instructions to a female servant to kill the child.

Ten years later in Scotland, Douglas visits Hartley on business when he sees the governess is Jeanne, whom he thought was dead. Douglas wants revenge for her jilting him and for leaving their daughter to die. Through a du Marchand servant, he raises their child. When Hartley tries to make love to his governess, Jeanne flees into the night, but Douglas' servant catches her and brings her to him. He offers her a position as governess to his daughter, but the two fall into each other's arms and makes love. As she works for him as the governess to his daughter, their love of a decade ago resurfaces, but neither trusts the other in spite of a matchmaking child until evil resurfaces and forces the truth out of both them.

This engaging regency romance stars two hurting souls who fail to recognize that her sire outmaneuvered them when they were young. The story line is a solid tale of mistrust as neither will open up first to the person they love. The return of evil may serve as the catalyst that brings the duo tighter and adds suspense, but though explained seems unnecessary and stretched. Still fans will enjoy this delightful historical because of the deep rooted feelings (love and hate) on the part of Douglas and Jeanne.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Frustrating Pretense.
Review: In my perfect world of 10, a Karen Ranney book appears 3 times -- a rare distinction because Ms. Ranney is not one of my 'cherished' authors. Probably because this author generally writes stories filled with a dark despondency. Ms. Ranney may not be one of my favorites, yet I read this writer faithfully. Karen Ranney has the power to draw and then imprison me within her stories.

SO IN LOVE is another installment involving the MacRae family, of Ranney's series "The Highland Lords." This is Douglas' story. At seventeen, Douglas MacRae shared a passionate love with sixteen-year-old Jeanne du Marchand, the beautiful daughter of a wealthy French count. Shocked to find his daughter involved with a foreigner, Jeanne's father savagely ended the love affair.

Time moved on. Douglas MacRae is now a successful businessman in Edinburgh; Jeanne du Marchand is a governess. The years have been kinder to Douglas MacRae.

So what did I think of this Ranney book? Why all the pretense? Why are Douglas and Jeanne's feelings cloaked in secrecy? Why the absurd head games? To create a story, silly goose. If our lovers had been up front with their tales of woe, the story would have ended on page 100. But why, why, why? Again Karen Ranney writes the pulling words and again I am drawn into her story. Definitely a page turner, but presentation problems scream out loud.

Just for the record -- the 3 Ranney books on my keeper shelf:
1. Tapestry,
2. My Beloved,

3. After the Kiss.

Grace Atkinson, Ontario - Canada.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Finally, the light at the end of the tunnel.
Review: Karen Ranney is one of the most frustrating authors. The MacRae series has held no appeal for me. I bought two of the earlier highland lord books and couldn't finish either one. Why I bought this one, I'm not sure. I picked it up on impulse, remembering that while Karen Ranney has put out some lousy stories, she's also written some brilliant ones. Any author who can make a leper into one of the greatest romance heroes of all time has to have a few more good books left in her. So I bought, I read, and while I'm not thrilled, I see serious signs that Karen Ranney may be moving back into top form.

Young and madly in love, Jeanne du Marchand was a French noblewoman whose dreams were about to come true. At sixteen, she found herself carrying her lover's child, expecting to marry him so they could begin their happily ever after. Fate and her arrogant jerk of a father step in. Her father tells her that her lover has abandoned her and sends her away to bear her child in disgrace. After the child is born he has it taken away from her and sends her to a convent where she is to pay for her sins for the next nine years. Jeanne hopes that her lover will come for her, hopes to be reunited with her child and endures physical and mental torture at the convent so that she can find them again someday.

At seventeen, Douglas MacRae's heart was shattered when he was abandoned by Jeanne. A servant tells him Jeanne is with child and has fled from him, never wanting to see him again. Leaving France for his native Scotland, Douglas is distraught, but resolves to return to France and at least find his child. At Jeanne's family estate, he learns that she has borne their child and left it with an old peasant couple. Douglas takes his malnourished, nearly dead infant daughter from the couple and returns with her to Scotland, hating Jeanne for abandoning the child. He names the baby Margaret.

Our story really begins when Jeanne and Douglas meet again ten years later. Jeanne has been forced to flee both the convent and France because of the Revolution, and decides to make her way to Scotland. She's working as a governess for a business associate of Douglas's. When her employer makes improper remarks about her to Douglas, Douglas seeks her out and offers her a job as his governess. Jeanne takes Douglas up on his offer when her employer molests her and threatens to make her his mistress.

"So In Love" is, as you have probably guessed, a story with a HUGE misunderstanding. Jeanne is mad at Douglas because he never came back for her and their child. Douglas is mad at Jeanne because she left him and deserted their child, leaving the infant to die. Do they ever have a conversation and figure all this out? Yeah, about thirty pages away from the end of the book. This story left me gritting my teeth in frustration over the unnecessary lack of communication.

Jeanne is, in almost every way, an excellent heroine. She's had a rough time of it, but she's a survivor. Despite the terrible things that have happened, she still has a soft heart underneath her armor and you find yourself really hoping she'll get a happy ending. It's weird, but even her reluctance to explain to Douglas and clear up the big misunderstanding is so well done that I almost buy into it (almost), and oddly it never leads me to question her intelligence. She's tough with the villain when he reappears, not giving an inch, and I just can't help but like her.

Douglas is a fairly likable hero too. He's raised his daughter, and I'm as much a sucker for the "sexy hero raising a kid alone" thing as the next girl is. It is even believable that he offers to hire Jeanne despite the fact that he hates her so much, because deep down he's a good guy and hates to see anyone in her tough position--and of course deep down he's still in love with her. Douglas's character is a little less believable with the big misunderstanding thing. He hasn't been stuck in a convent being tortured for the last nine years, and he should have the intelligence to realize that they were just teenagers and that whatever he might think she's guilty of, Jeanne has obviously changed--not that she's really guilty of anything, as he'd discover if they just had a conversation.

Karen Ranney specializes in angst. When she's on her game, she's an absolute master at it, and she really makes an effort in "So In Love". It's sad, but for what it's worth I want to say that "So In Love" is hands down the best "misunderstanding" story I've ever read. It's readable, in spite of the frustrating elements. In fact, for me, it was downright enjoyable. The character development is thorough, the love story is poignant, and because they were so young when they were separated, you want to give the protagonists the benefit of the doubt.

I give this book three stars. While this isn't a masterpiece, I'm glad I read it. Karen Ranney seems to be done with the MacRae series and she also seems to be almost fully back on track. I'd recommend this to any Ranney fan who can stomach the "misunderstanding" angle, because otherwise it's excellent. If you're new to Karen Ranney, I'd say read it if this kind of story appeals to you. If you're not sure about this story but you love your romance with serious angst, then do whatever it takes to find yourself a copy of Ms. Ranney's "My Beloved"--it's on my all-time top ten list.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great writing, Good Characters
Review: This is the first book I've read by Ranney, and I guarantee it won't be the last. The writing is superior, the story was gripping, and the plot is not at all stale (as you would have expected from yet another "secret baby" book). I was especially gratified to see that she really understood the close relationship Scotland and France shared, and worked it nicely into her plot. If you're looking for a new writer (and I always am) I highly recommend this book.


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