Rating: Summary: When Did These People Bathe? Review: Although I loved this book and it's worthy of 5 stars, something bothered me. Jenna's aboard ship for 4 days or so and she longs to wash and to wash her hair, which she admits is unclean, but doesn't. Then she must dress in her finest gown and her companion fixes her hair 'as best she can' so that Jenna can join people for dinner. Although Jenna receives many compliments on her appearance, I couldn't get past the fact that she HAD to look and smell unclean. And don't even get me started on Alex; after a month of walking daily in the hot, humid forests of Brazil to get home, his own sweat and subsequent illness making him quite rank, can you imagine how badly he must have smelled? And he kissed Jenna!
Rating: Summary: Taking the Long Way Around Review: Captain Will Malfour was not always a priate, but instead a Scottish lord named Alex Leslie. A miserable battle at Culloden Moor ended leaving many dead, but leaving Alex Leslie scarred in more ways than one. In an attempt to get back at the British for the masacre at Culloden Alex finds him self protecting ten small orphaned children and pursuing a path he would have never dreamed. As unlikely as the path he takes, is the love he finds along the way. Lady Jenna fills up a void in his heart, but will he be able to overlook the plague her family has been for Scotland as well as for himself, and let himself love her the way she loves him?A very moving tale of romance set in a historical period. Ms. Potter has a knack for weaving many spectacular events into one cohesive story. You will not be disapointed.
Rating: Summary: Taking the Long Way Around Review: Captain Will Malfour was not always a priate, but instead a Scottish lord named Alex Leslie. A miserable battle at Culloden Moor ended leaving many dead, but leaving Alex Leslie scarred in more ways than one. In an attempt to get back at the British for the masacre at Culloden Alex finds him self protecting ten small orphaned children and pursuing a path he would have never dreamed. As unlikely as the path he takes, is the love he finds along the way. Lady Jenna fills up a void in his heart, but will he be able to overlook the plague her family has been for Scotland as well as for himself, and let himself love her the way she loves him? A very moving tale of romance set in a historical period. Ms. Potter has a knack for weaving many spectacular events into one cohesive story. You will not be disapointed.
Rating: Summary: robust romantic adventure Review: He managed to survive Culloden, but the battle left him with an acrimonious aftertaste following the atrocities of the English. Alex Leslie changed his surname to Malfour and escorted children across the Channel to France. There he found homes for all of his lost sheep except for Meg and Robin who refused to stay with anyone but Alex. Comte de Rochemont offers Alex an opportunity to make money and to take vengeance on the English. The French noble obtains papers for Alex to work as a privateer and outfits a ship the Ami. Alex sets sail across the Atlantic to steal English cargo with ultimately Brazil and its diamonds as his destination. Alex captures the English vessel Charlotte that contains Lady Jenna Campbell as a passenger. Because of a disfigurement, Jenna has been treated by her family as the "devil's child". She was heading to Barbados to marry before Alex abducted her. Alex detests the Campbells for their betrayal at Culloden, but admires the courage, spunk and nurturing of Jenna. As they fall in love, their perils have just begun. Though the aftermath of Culloden through star-crossed lovers may be the most frequent theme in historical romance novels, Patricia Potter purveys a fresh look through her strong cast as readers see the impact on children. The story line is loaded with action yet enables the audience to understand what drives both lead characters ands several key secondary players. Fans of the era and anyone who relishes a robust romantic adventure will want to read Peerless Potter's powerful tale. Harriet Klausner
Rating: Summary: Nearly Perfect, Except for Editing Review: One minute we have Robin sitting in a chair 'reading a medical book' and in the same scene a moment later, the author writes that he is 'waking up.' Huh? Alex does the same thing. Jenna walks into the room and 'he rose' to talk to her, then a few sentences later, the author writes, 'he rose.' And many times, I didn't know who was talking to whom, as the book would read 'he,' instead of a name, and I'd have to go back a couple of paragraphs to find out who was talking. And I think in one scene there, the author meant to write 'Robin' and not 'Claude.'
I've never read a book with so many errors, but despite that annoyance, the story was fantastic and interesting.
Rating: Summary: The Diamond King Review: Patricia Potter has outdone herself once again! Her chacters grab you from the start. I cheered for Jenna as she grew into her own person. Alex had my heart the moment he walked onto the page. I couldn't put the book down. The entire cast of chacters drew me in. I felt like I was riding the high seas along with them. Thank you, Patricia. Please write us more wonderful tales!
Rating: Summary: Scottish practicality and romance on the high seas Review: The final book in Patricia Potter's trilogy leaves Scotland for the high seas and continues the tradition of mixing matters of life and death with moments of absurdity. Readers who have been following the book for the atmosphere of Scotland, the trials of life after Culloden, and references back to familiar characters will find very little connection to previous books. Once you stop looking for the familiar theme (people who aren't quite what they seem struggling to deal with British occupation) you can start to enjoy this book on its own terms. Alex Leslie, the brother of the heroine of 'The Heart Queen', has finished rescuing Scottish children from the British and attempts to place the last two with a family in Paris - to no avail, since they promptly stow away on his new ship to be with him. His sidekick Burke and the boy and girl, Meg and Will, are the only reminders of the past as he takes on the job of captaining a privateer for a French investor and heads for the Caribbean. The future is embodied in a new character, brought on board with the crew and passengers of a pirated ship : Jenna Campbell, a member of the hated clan and at first a symbol of the troubles they've left behind. But Jenna has troubles of her own - a birthmark on her arm that marks her as cursed and unlucky, and a family who have always hidden her away until now, when she is traveling to an arranged marriage to a man she has never met. Jenna gets to show her true colors nursing Meg and dealing with further complications of the piratical venture. She soon realizes that her fondest hope is to steer Alex away from his course of bitterness and revenge and on towards a worthwhile life. Alex, meanwhile, is becoming distracted from the second part of his get-rich-quick scheme by the Campbell lass. The Diamond King explores the transient and risky nature of a career as a privateer as Alex struggles to make the switch from Jacobite outlaw to pirate to diamond smuggler. Will he find a safe place for everyone he cares about, and sail away to bring them no more harm? Or will Alex Leslie risk living again? This final book in the trilogy winds things up with a little more melancholy and a little less slapstick than The Black Knave and the Heart Queen, but the humanity of the characters and the unexpected twists of this unexplored corner of the historical era keeps you reading on to a satisfying conclusion. I give it 4 stars in itself, or 3 stars as part of a series that it doesn't quite fit.
Rating: Summary: Happy Tale Despite Heartaches Review: The horrors Alex and Meg and Robin and even Jenna endured during their lifetime was tragic and they all deserved happiness. Somewhere in the midst of all the tragedy the author managed to bring joy and romance to the main characters, which made for a very interesting story.
Rating: Summary: A Moving Tale of Romance and War Review: The horrors of Culloden will never be forgotten and I'm embarrassed to say that the very county in which I live is named "Cumberland." God, what an awful man he was! It's a shame that the Highland way of life was practically wiped out because of this evil man and fine people were killed. But through all this, P.P. managed to give us a breathtaking story of love and danger. These are very memorable characters we'll not likely forget.
Rating: Summary: So Romantic...but strange editing Review: The love scenes weren't exactly explicit - they were sweet and romantic. Alex and Jenna were very much in love and this was one of those 'on-the-edge-of-your-seat books. One never knew what was going to happen next. It was just great, (except of course, for all the typos and mistakes about where characters were sitting or standing).
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