Status
Call number
Series
Genres
Collections
Publication
Description
Fiction. Literature. Romance. Historical Fiction. Strong as a Viking. Handsome as Adonis. Rich as Midas. Collin "Cole" Talmage, Duke of Trewyth, is the stuff that legends are made of. He's the English Empire's golden son-until fate has its way with him. Cole's family is killed and his closest comrade betrays him on the battlefield, leaving him gravely injured. But Cole is not one to dwell on misfortune. He is a man of duty, honor, and desire. And now he's ready for the fight of his lifetime . . . Imogen Pritchard is a beautiful lass who works in a hospital by day and as a serving maid at night. Years ago, when she was young and penniless, she ended up spending a scandalous night with Cole, whose tormented soul was matched only by his earth-shattering passion. Imogen entered a marriage of convenience-one that left her a wealthy widow-but she never forgot Cole. Now that her long-lost lover has turned up in her hospital, injured and with no memory of her, Imogen is torn: Is it a blessing or a curse that their past remains a secret to Cole, even as his new passion for her leaves him wanting to protect and possess her at all costs? Contains mature themes.… (more)
User reviews
Years later, Colin has been through hell, captured, tortured and he lost a hand, his only solace in his prison was his memory of Ginny, but he's back now and looking for her.
This is a wonderful story. We wait and wait for Colin to find his Ginny and for him to fall in love with Imogen. There's danger abound with a serial killer on the loose and Imogen becomes a target. Great writing and consequently Colin and Imogen's friendship and relationship develop beautifully. And a great ending. I loved it!
The Victorian Rebels #
5 Stars…all the way…wish I could find book one of the series but where I live…probably won’t happen. So…with books 2-4 now read I want…book 5…and any other books that will appear in the future.
Okay…I saw a review that made me question
Will she give you romance?
Yes
Will she give you hearts and flowers?
Not in this book but perhaps in others…perhaps.
Will she make you think and question and feel?
Definitely
Will you come away feeling you have read something worth reading?
I did – hope you will, too.
So…this book…
There is a woman trying to provide for her sister and mother after her father gambles away whatever they might have had if he had not been so feckless. She works to pay back his debt - as a nurse by day and a serving wench in a brothel at night.
One night a Duke walks in and her life changes…for the better?
Maybe but … perhaps not.
Can she question or refuse?
More than likely…not
The fact that the man who deflowers her is gentle and kind lingers in her mind and a year later when he appears in her patient lineup she saves him but it does not save her…it is another of her patients that changes her life…a perhaps once young and swainish type that helps her overcome her horrors and leave her better off than she was before…except…there is a murderer on the loose and her neighbor is someone she remembers warmly but…he is no longer that man…and she is not the woman he remembers…
This is a book that intrigued me, caught me and kept me to the end.
I liked the characters, the plot and a lot more.
Was the hero perfect? NO
Was the heroine perfect? NO
Did they grow? Yes
Did they suit one another? YES
Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for the ARC. This is my honest review.
NOTE: I can hardly wait to find book one in the series and am looking forward to book #5…as I ponder WHO will star in it when it appears ;)
'these young wolves, were on the hunt for trouble, only waiting—straining—to be unleashed by one affirmative gesture from their alpha. As dangerous as they might prove to be, she knew at once that the young soldiers, now fanning into an arc,
A coldly dangerous, heart-stopping, opening! Enough to make this reader realize that so much more was to come.
By night Imogene Pritchard has been working off her dead father's debts at the notorious club The Bare Kitten as a server. By day she is a nurse in a London hospital.
Only this night 'Ginny' as she is known finds herself I way over her head waters, charting unknown territory that would influence the rest of her life.
When Collin "Cole" Talmage, Duke of Trewyth claims her for his own that claiming goes both ways.
Cole, a crown assassin and spy, holds onto his dream of that night spent with the kitten 'Ginny' as a talisman against the most difficult of times. He continues to search for her.
Imogene runs from that night and yet never forgets the Duke.
When they both meet again, Cole is angered by his helplessness and attraction to this woman who is not his 'Ginny.'
However another problem arises, women are being murdered-and the women all resemble Imogene.
What a woman Imogene is. Fearless, strong, compassionate--and in love with a man who does not know her.
This return to Byrne's world of dangerous men and women is another winner.
A NetGalley ARC
Thanks to Netgalley for the ARC.
The Victorian Rebels series is my favorite series in the historical romance category right now. I eagerly anticipate each new installment, but then hoard it because I want to have something to look forward to and I know once I
I couldn’t hold out any longer, but I did manage to read the book very slowly, drawing it out and lapping up every delicious morsel one chapter at a time, trying to make it last as long as I could.
Kerrigan Bryne can create a dark and troubled hero better than anyone out there right now. Collin ‘Cole’ Talmage, the Duke of Trewyth, is tortured, but is slightly different from the heroes featured in past installments.
He’s a privileged Duke who spends one night with the sweet and innocent Ginny, leaving him with a memory he can not shake. In fact, it’s his memory of her that sustains him on the battlefield, where he is severely injured. She haunts him always, as his seemingly futile search for her stretches out over the years.
Imogen Pritchard, is a nurse by day, a maid by night, but after a dangerous encounter she is saved by a marriage of convenience. Now widowed, Imogen suddenly finds herself face to face with the one man she could never forget. But, little does he know, Imogen, the wealthy widow next door, is the woman he has been longing for. Should Imogen remind him of their shared past or keep it secret from him?
As a big fan of romantic suspense, I loved the element of suspense in this chapter, which was like the cherry on top!
The way the lovers seemed like two ships passing in the night also adds an element of tension to the story and of course a little frustration, too.
Cole, of course, is heartbroken and sad, but also, bitter and angry. He doesn’t know what to make of Imogen and his attraction to her, which leaves him conflicted about his feelings for Ginny, while Imogen is afraid to tell him the truth, which creates inner angst and turmoil, but makes for some seriously sharp dialogue as the pair play a delightful and slightly dangerous lovers game.
The only downside to the story is that the ending was tidied up a bit too abruptly, combining the threads a little too hurriedly, but it was still dramatic and despite the dark tones, the book ended on a humorous note, allowing Cole to steal the show and Imogen’s heart once and for all.
This is another terrific effort by this author. I love her style, her risk -taking plot lines, and how her stories are ever evolving and changing guaranteeing they stay fresh and original!
4.5 stars
I find that this author is brilliant when constructing emotional depth of her characters and it is that that keeps me coming to her stories, regardless of the predictability of the plots. She is also very descriptive and not just the scenery. She excels in taking you deep within the heart of the characters, including the sensuality she portrays.
Reading this story, I marveled at the emotions I went through as the story progressed. I was sad as the story opens and our couple meets for the first time and then I got angry at the hero for his stupidity. I marveled as our heroine's survival instincts prevail and cheered her on as she triumphs. And I laughed out loud at the heroes description of his "neighbor" and at his conundrum.
Seriously, this is one book you must read this year. It is without a doubt, one of the best stories out there today.
Melanie for b2b
Complimentary copy provided by the publishe
The Duke is the fourth book in Kerrigan Byrne's Victorian Rebel's Series. I've enjoyed each of these books, though my favorite still remains the first. I've also admired and become a bigger fan of Derek Perkin's
Interestingly whereas each one of the prior heroes featured a rebel in some way, The Duke seems to have the least of this characteristic. Instead in this novel we have a Duke, Collin Talmage the Duke of Trenwyth, who although he obtains that title unexpectedly after his brother the expected heir dies, continues with his military/espionage activities and pays dearly for his service when he is captured and brutally tortured.
It's clear that this experience changes him into a bitter and less forgiving character particularly to the one woman, Imogene Pritchard, a woman he believed to be a prostitute, but who he actually paid to unknowingly take her virtue (she was a barmaid indentured to a brothel to pay off her father's debt and made it clear that's all she would do, but at the astonishing rate of 20 pounds the owner gave her no choice). As luck would have it neither has forgotten the other. Indeed they've longed to find the other and have each used the memory of the other to get them through tough times.
So it is quite to Imogen's surprise that when Collin awakens in the hospital where she works as a nurse (her real job), he doesn't recognize her. Moreover he is incredibly hostile to her even though she's the one that pleads his cause and determines his true ailment saving his life in the process; only earning her a quick dismissal in the process. Could there possibly be a HEA under the circumstances?
Derek Perkins does a great job of narrating The Duke. One aspect which I always look for in a good narration is distinguishable characters. Mr. Perkins not only does this for the male characters but he also does this for Imogen and the other female characters and manages to create genuine sounding female characters in the process. Mr. Perkins also infuses his reading with appropriate emotion and allows the listener to feel the mood of the scene through just his intonation, pacing and rendition.
All in all I enjoyed the Duke, though not as much as prior installments. In particular I liked the patient/nurse spin of the story. However I felt that it had a very busy plot overall. In fact what I describe above is only about half of the story as Ms. Byrne uses some convenient coincidences to create what seems almost like a second story two years after the hospital scene I described above. It was just hard to believe that fate had their paths cross three separate times (first at the brothel, then the hospital, and two year later as neighbors). Nonetheless, I'm glad I listened to this story and will definitely be looking forward to listening to more of Byrne's works in the future.
Source: Review copy provided for review purposes.
Collin "Cole" Talmage is now the Duke of Trenwyth after the death of his mother, father, and older brother. The crown still has need of him and his spy
Imogen spends her days as a nurse and nights as "Ginny”, a barkeep in a brothel. When Cole and his soldiers walk in, he instantly captures her attention. Their one night together will never be forgotten but the next two years will shake up both their worlds.
Cole and Imogen now live next door to one another but will pain and pride keep them miles apart?
The man had been scoundrel and saint. Heathen and hero. A dangerous man and a deferential lover.
Fourth in the Victorian Rebels series, The Duke, could be read as a standalone. The couples from the previous books all make extended appearances but while readers of the series will enjoy getting glimpses of favorites, newcomers will enjoy how they help to fill out the world the author has created; you might wonder how some relationships were formed but you won't be lost here. The author's talent of creating strong characters with dark pasts continues but I felt this one was a little slower paced. The sometimes leaning toward purple prose and tendency to wax poetic stood out a bit more in fault because of the slowness. The repetitive comparing of the hero to a beast also became redundant and left me wanting more emotional and interaction scenes instead of lines of telling me what the hero looked like.
"You haven't any idea the strength it takes to be a woman."
I really enjoyed the premise of the story, Cole and Imogene sharing one night, circumstances keep them apart, hidden identities, danger, and then coming together. This is somewhat of an enemies-to-lovers trope story, however, Cole doesn't recognize Imogene but she knows who he is the whole time. Cole's story of being captured, tortured, and then shutting himself off from the world isn't anything new to the romance genre. Yet, he's a little different because we don't usually see our heroes be on the snobby side of classism, which he is. He never crosses an unredeemable line, and is in fact probably more historically accurate, but you might want to throw your sherry in his face a time or two. Imogen also follows some trope lines but again, feels slightly different. She has to work in a brothel to work off money her father owed, deals with a sexist doctor as a nurse, and becomes a bit of a Cinderella by marrying a patient. Anstruther is Imogen's elderly patient, an earl, and ends up marrying her to save her. The glimpses we get of him here have me wanting a novella of him and his former wife Sarah; he was so kind and funny.
She was a woman of desire, of spirit and determination.
Cole and Imogen have fire and emotion but after their initial meeting, it takes a while to get there. Cole is an extremely bitter person after his capture and torture with the Ottomans and persists on being fairly rude to Imogene for more than half of the story. I think having him discover her as his "Ginny" earlier on, would have given me more of the loving time I craved between the two. I really enjoyed Imogen as a character from her strength to her compassion but I feel like we missed some parts of her by never really seeing her family. It felt extremely odd to show her working in a brothel for her mother and sister and never getting to meet them (we briefly glimpse the sister). The family dynamic would have added more emotional dimension to her character.
The ending felt extremely rushed with the reveal and wrap-up of the villain almost giving me whiplash. I really enjoy this author's writing but the execution felt a little off here with too much focus on overwriting Cole's physical stature, a meandering middle, and not enough love between our couple. However, even when this author uses tropes, she still manages to put a spin that have them feeling new and intriguing. Plus, if you're missing all your favorite couples from previous books, their appearances here will have you smiling. I'll still be anticipating books from this series, especially a certain Inspector as he seems to have some secrets to tell.
Don't get me wrong, Imogen was amazing...I didn't even mind Cole entirely. But I read this for her. I would read it and enjoy it for her again. I
I will likely take a bit of a breather now, for a day or two at least. I'm not sure what I expect to find on the other side of it.
2nd read- I really tried to cut the hero a lot of slack reading this again, and felt that I was having some success with
4 Stars
The second chances romance between Imogen Pritchard and Cole Talmage is particularly appealing mainly due to the fact that the hero and heroine are atypical fare for historical romance. As a barmaid and a nurse, Imogen is as far from an aristocratic debutante as it is possible to be,
Imogen and Cole have incredible chemistry and their arguments (think liberal Democrat versus moderate Republican) are some of the most sizzling and entertaining in the genre.
As always, Byrne does not shy away from the harsher realities of Victorian England whether it be the plight of prostitutes and abused women or the suffering of soldiers returning from war with both physical and mental wounds.
The minor suspense plot is the weakest element of the book as it is quite underdeveloped and somewhat rushed at the end. Nevertheless, the climax and resolution are intense and exciting.
All in all, a lovely read and I look forward to Gavin St. James's book next.