Home :: Books :: Romance  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance

Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Roses Are Red (Arabesque)

Roses Are Red (Arabesque)

List Price: $4.99
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great location and storyline
Review: How can someone get hung up on punctuation. How petty! This was a great story This beautiful story set among the upper middle-class blacks in contmporary London, England was a joy to read. Kendra Davenport, a young woman of Jamaican parentage, is the editor and publisher of her father's newspaper, the Nubian Chronicel, a weekly that caters to the West Indian population in England. She is living her girlhood dream as apublisher but it is all now being threatened. Her jet-setting sister's gambling debts play right into the hands of her father's rival, Benjamin Brentwood. Her father and Brentwood were friends as young men and started the paper together, but had a falling out and now Brentwood is back to claim what he feels is rightfully his. Brentwood has become a media giant in the States and his son, shay, an arrogant young brother newly arrived from New York, whose Jamaican father has revolutionized the black media in the U.S., as vice-president of Brentwood Communications Group feels it is his duty to help his father obtain the Nubian Chronicle. And because the Davenports are in desperate need to raise the $150,00 to pay off the gambling debt, he takes advantage of them. However, Shay did not take into account the attraction Miss Davenport holds for him. A woman with exquisite beauty as well as brains, Shay is attracted to the enemy. Kendra is in a relationship with the distinguished Prime Minister Selwyn Owens, the first black P.M. in Northern London, a somewhat stuffy but honorable man. But when she is undecided about his marriage proposal, the relationship turns hostile. Meanwhile a clause in her mother's will might possibly save th newspaper from being taken over completely by the Brentwoods. But then Shay comes up with anothe angle, Kendra thinks in order to gain control. The deal is Kendra must marry Shay in order to save the Davenports from total financial and personal ruin. Kendra, mistrustful of Shay, especially after experiencing an accident outside of his home after spending a passionate night with him, reluctantly enters into this marriage all the time denying she has fallen in love with the good-looking brother. He also must admit to himself that his reasons for a forced marriage are more than for a building of an empire between the two families as their fathers want. He wants Kendra with a passion. Soon after their marriage, tragedy strikes the Brentwood family, bringing the two closer. Meanwhile her ex-boyfriend, Selwyn, unable to accept her marriage is doing strange things and those around fear Kendra may be in danger. This stroy has suspense as well as descriptive scenry of the hustle and bustle of London and the rich culture the West Indians and African of the diaspora bring to it. It is delighful to see a side of black contemporary life in another setting other than the United States

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great location and storyline
Review: How can someone get hung up on punctuation. How petty! This was a great story This beautiful story set among the upper middle-class blacks in contmporary London, England was a joy to read. Kendra Davenport, a young woman of Jamaican parentage, is the editor and publisher of her father's newspaper, the Nubian Chronicel, a weekly that caters to the West Indian population in England. She is living her girlhood dream as apublisher but it is all now being threatened. Her jet-setting sister's gambling debts play right into the hands of her father's rival, Benjamin Brentwood. Her father and Brentwood were friends as young men and started the paper together, but had a falling out and now Brentwood is back to claim what he feels is rightfully his. Brentwood has become a media giant in the States and his son, shay, an arrogant young brother newly arrived from New York, whose Jamaican father has revolutionized the black media in the U.S., as vice-president of Brentwood Communications Group feels it is his duty to help his father obtain the Nubian Chronicle. And because the Davenports are in desperate need to raise the $150,00 to pay off the gambling debt, he takes advantage of them. However, Shay did not take into account the attraction Miss Davenport holds for him. A woman with exquisite beauty as well as brains, Shay is attracted to the enemy. Kendra is in a relationship with the distinguished Prime Minister Selwyn Owens, the first black P.M. in Northern London, a somewhat stuffy but honorable man. But when she is undecided about his marriage proposal, the relationship turns hostile. Meanwhile a clause in her mother's will might possibly save th newspaper from being taken over completely by the Brentwoods. But then Shay comes up with anothe angle, Kendra thinks in order to gain control. The deal is Kendra must marry Shay in order to save the Davenports from total financial and personal ruin. Kendra, mistrustful of Shay, especially after experiencing an accident outside of his home after spending a passionate night with him, reluctantly enters into this marriage all the time denying she has fallen in love with the good-looking brother. He also must admit to himself that his reasons for a forced marriage are more than for a building of an empire between the two families as their fathers want. He wants Kendra with a passion. Soon after their marriage, tragedy strikes the Brentwood family, bringing the two closer. Meanwhile her ex-boyfriend, Selwyn, unable to accept her marriage is doing strange things and those around fear Kendra may be in danger. This stroy has suspense as well as descriptive scenry of the hustle and bustle of London and the rich culture the West Indians and African of the diaspora bring to it. It is delighful to see a side of black contemporary life in another setting other than the United States

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Roses are Red!!
Review: Serrani or Icilyn's (same author) book was very good. This was my second book by her and she really lived up to her work. If you liked this one you might want to read about Kendra's troubled little sister in "Violets are Blue." If you get confused like I did she did that novel along with another book called "Island Romace" by the name of Sonia Icilyn. Enjoy!!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Roses are Red!!
Review: Serrani or Icilyn's (same author) book was very good. This was my second book by her and she really lived up to her work. If you liked this one you might want to read about Kendra's troubled little sister in "Violets are Blue." If you get confused like I did she did that novel along with another book called "Island Romace" by the name of Sonia Icilyn. Enjoy!!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Fair reading.
Review: This book was interesting, yet I found that there were too many unnecessary punctuation marks throughout the book. I began enjoying the book, but the extra commas and semicolon's threw me off. I really didn't finish the book, because my attention strayed.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great idea but pieced together in confussion.
Review: This is a good book except why would a newspaper company as world renown as the author proclaims not be able to raise $150,000? This did not make sense to me. If they were talking about raising $1,500,000 this would be different. I think the premises of the book is good but get real. We people of color have money or the means to raise the cash if something like this happens to us. I do like how Shay changed is mind on marriage but the author never discussed why he felt marriage was not a good institution. It seems like his parents had a good relationship so why they negativity? If Benjamin Brentwood had so much influence why would he get revenge on Kendra's father after 30 years for a love affair that had never really been developed? He really was a powerful man compare to Sammy. What really happend to the M.P.'s wife and why was he so crazy? There as so many unanswered question. I still think the author had a great idea.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great idea but pieced together in confussion.
Review: This is a good book except why would a newspaper company as world renown as the author proclaims not be able to raise $150,000? This did not make sense to me. If they were talking about raising $1,500,000 this would be different. I think the premises of the book is good but get real. We people of color have money or the means to raise the cash if something like this happens to us. I do like how Shay changed is mind on marriage but the author never discussed why he felt marriage was not a good institution. It seems like his parents had a good relationship so why they negativity? If Benjamin Brentwood had so much influence why would he get revenge on Kendra's father after 30 years for a love affair that had never really been developed? He really was a powerful man compare to Sammy. What really happend to the M.P.'s wife and why was he so crazy? There as so many unanswered question. I still think the author had a great idea.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates