Ratings2
Average rating3.5
4/5
Thank you, NetGalley and St Martin's Press, for providing the arc for my honest opinion.
Lottie is a lady's companion who one day knocks Viscount Wennington off his horse. And after he yells at her, she threatens to whip him. Accidentally, of course.
When her employer takes her to her nephew's house for a surprise birthday party, she's shocked to see that said nephew is the same man she knocked in the park.
Viscount Wennington despises being in a spotlight, so when his mother damnd a birthday party for him,. Guy agrees on a small soiree. He has no idea that his mother and aunt, with the help of the vexing woman he met at the park, invited a gaggle of debutantes, all vying for his attention. And he's less than impressed that the only person he wants to spend time with is Lottie herself.
I enjoyed this book. The characters and plot were well written, and I loved all the bickering between Lottie and Guy. I was giggling and kicking my feet at the obvious way the matrons were meddling to bring them together, while the main characters didn't realize that.
The writing was good, but confusing at times. There were too many internal thoughts between the dialogue (which often had nothing to do with the scenes they were in), which slowed down the plot a lot. And as the narration tried to use the stylized language to make it more realistic as a historical romance, the way the characters used modern gen-z slang that clashed with the flowery descriptions on the same page.
I enjoyed the book very much and I loved how it all turn up. While public confessions are not my cup of tea, I liked how it was written in this book. And the plot was engaging and fun and really enjoyed Lottie and Guy's story.
The book is perfect for people who love:
π forced proximity
π enemies to lovers
π meddling mamas
π grumpy & sunshine
π age gap
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