Picture of author.

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Helen Conrad also writes as Jena Hunt and Raye Morgan.

Series

Works by Raye Morgan

The Reluctant Daddy (1996) 39 copies
The Ranchers Box Set Books 1-3 (2013) — Author — 35 copies
Saved By You (2014) 31 copies
Her Valentine Blind Date (2009) 29 copies
Those Baby Blues (1996) 27 copies
The Rebel Prince (2006) 25 copies, 1 review
Bride by Royal Appointment (2007) 24 copies
The Boss's Double Trouble Twins (2007) 23 copies, 2 reviews
Jack and the Princess (2003) 19 copies
Baby Dreams (1996) 19 copies
The Prince's Secret Bride (2008) 18 copies
She's Having My Baby! (2002) 18 copies
Royal Nights (2003) 17 copies
A Gift for Baby (1996) 17 copies
Betrothed to the Prince (2003) 16 copies
My Little Runaway (2013) 15 copies
Found: His Royal Baby (2008) 15 copies
Babies by the Busload (1996) 15 copies
Keeping Her Baby's Secret (2009) 14 copies
Counterfeit Princess (2003) 14 copies
Babies on the Doorstep (1994) 14 copies
Instant Dad (1996) 14 copies
Desperado (1988) 13 copies
Yesterday's Outlaw (1994) 13 copies
Wife by Contract (1997) 12 copies
Abby and the Playboy Prince (2008) 12 copies
Joe's Miracle (1993) 12 copies
Wife for a Night (1987) 12 copies
Baby Aboard (1991) 12 copies
The Boss's Special Delivery (2005) 11 copies, 1 review
The Daddy Due Date (1994) 11 copies, 1 review
A Little Moonlighting (2002) 11 copies
In a Marrying Mood (1991) 10 copies
The Bachelor (1993) 10 copies
Destiny Bay: Baby Dreams (Box Set 3-in-1) (2013) — Author — 10 copies
The Reluctant Princess (2011) 10 copies
The Boss, the Baby and Me (2005) 9 copies, 1 review
Promoted to Wife (Destiny Bay) (2000) — some editions — 9 copies
Diamond in the Rough (1986) 9 copies
Almost a Bride (1992) 8 copies
The Hand-Picked Bride (1997) 8 copies
Native Silver (2013) 8 copies
Too Many Babies (1989) 8 copies
Undercover Affair (1984) 7 copies
Temptation's Sting (1983) 7 copies
Everlasting (1984) 7 copies
Summer Wind (1983) 7 copies
Crystal Blue Horizon (1984) 7 copies
Secret Dad (1999) 6 copies
Husband for Hire (1988) 6 copies
Make Believe Wife (2013) 6 copies
Caution: Charm At Work (1993) 6 copies
Undercover Passion (2004) 6 copies
A Daddy for Her Sons (2013) 5 copies
The Heir's Proposal (2013) 5 copies, 1 review
The Baby Invasion (2013) 5 copies
Sweet Victory (1982) 5 copies
A Lucky Streak (1987) 4 copies
Chasing Dreams (1988) 4 copies
Tears of Gold (1985) 4 copies
Working Overtime (2001) 4 copies
Ladies' Man (1990) 4 copies
Marriage for Her Baby (2013) 4 copies, 1 review
Something Wild and Free (1986) 3 copies
Embers of the Sun (1983) 3 copies
Taming the Lost Prince (2012) 3 copies
Rebel Dad (1993) 2 copies
Proud Possession (1983) 2 copies
Jade Tide (1983) 2 copies
Traces of Indigo (1989) 2 copies
The Royal House of Niroli (8 books) — Contributor — 2 copies
Silver Linings (1990) 2 copies
Too Scared to Breathe (2011) 2 copies
Sweeter Than Wine (1982) 1 copy
Karriär eller barn? (1998) 1 copy
Starý mládenec (1995) 1 copy
Setkání po létech (1995) 1 copy
Julia Extra Band 376 (2014) 1 copy
Šarm v akci (1995) 1 copy
A Stroke of Genius (1985) 1 copy
Szellemkeresők (1995) 1 copy
Indiánské kouzlo (1997) 1 copy

Associated Works

Betrothed to the Prince (2015) — Original Text — 2 copies
Beauty and the Reclusive Prince (2016) — Original Text — 1 copy
The Prince's Secret Bride (2014) — Original Text — 1 copy
Royal Nights 2 (2015) — Original Text — 1 copy
Counterfeit Princess (2015) — Original Text — 1 copy
Secret Dad (2018) — Original Text — 1 copy
Harlequin Comics Best Selection, Vol. 007 — Original Text — 1 copy
Abby and the Playboy Prince (2015) — Original Text — 1 copy
Marriage for Her Baby [Manga] (2017) — Original Text — 1 copy
Bride by Royal Appointment (2015) — Original Text — 1 copy
Found: His Royal Baby (2014) — Original Text — 1 copy
Promoted―to Wife! [Manga] (2017) — Original Text — 1 copy
A Daddy for Her Sons [Manga] (2017) — Original Text — 1 copy
Secret Prince, Instant Daddy! (2016) — Original Text — 1 copy
Her Valentine Blind Date (2015) — Original Text — 1 copy
Jack and the Princess (2011) — Original Text — 1 copy
Royal Nights 1 (2015) — Original Text — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Conrad, Helen
Other names
Conrad, Helen
Hunt, Jenna
Morgan, Raye
Birthdate
1945-04-11
Gender
female
Short biography
Helen Conrad was born on April 11 in Pasadena, California, U.S.A. and grew up between Holland, Guam, and California, and spent a few years in Washington, D.C. as well. She obtained a B.A. in English Literature.

Helen was working toward a Master's in Library Science when she dropped out to have her first son. "One look into those baby blue eyes and I knew it was going to be a long time before I went back to school. But with young ones, you do have time to read, and the more I read, the more I learned about writing". She started writing because she felt guilty about spending so much time reading. "Through writing I figured I could still immerse myself in the stories I love, but I could actually claim I was working! The amazing thing was when I sold my first book and the excuse was justified. Dreams really do come true!"

After years of writing romantic suspense in the style of Mary Stewart and children's books in a lot of styles, she finally sold a romance to Jove's Second Chance at Love and there was celebration all around-at least in her ever-patient family of husband and four boys. She published four more romances for Jove under the name Jena Hunt, then began writing Silhouette Desires. A few sales to Bantam Loveswept and Harlequin Romance, Temptationand SuperRomance under the name Helen Conrad followed, as well as to Harpers, Dell Ecstasy, Mills & Boon, and even an historical with Zebra. Today, she is concentrating on Silhouette Romance, completely captivated by the breezy fun and touching poignancy of their compact, to-the-point form. She feels the perfect "quick read" should make the reader smile, sigh and put the book down feeling better about the state of love in the world.

Now, she lives in the Los Angeles area now with Nick, her geologist-computers cientist husband and the two of her four sons who still live at home."Having the boys around helps keep me up on the current trends," she says with a laugh. "But writing helps keep me in touch with the romance that weaves through the everyday lives we all live."
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Pasadena, California, USA
Disambiguation notice
Helen Conrad also writes as Jena Hunt and Raye Morgan.
Associated Place (for map)
California, USA

Members

Reviews

12 reviews
Good book. Sara is ready to take the final steps to adopt her niece when the baby's father shows up to take custody. She is devastated at the idea of losing little Savannah and is determined to convince Jake that he isn't father material. But no matter what she does Jake always seems to be able to cope with it. I have to say that Sara's attitude really bothered me. She should be happy that Savannah has a father who is so intent on giving her the best life that he possibly can. It seems that show more all she does is whine about how she's going to lose her and plot to undermine his confidence. She doesn't expect to be drawn to him and have so much inner conflict. First she wants him to fail, then she's praising him for what he does right, then screaming at him when he makes a mistake. I wanted to shake her. When she realized that she was falling in love with him she consented to the marriage of convenience in hopes that he would fall for her too. I did like the way that she finally got him to open up to her about his experiences. Unfortunately she didn't seem to understand that his feelings about his friends were a large part of who he was.

Jake was stunned to find out that he was a father. He was worried about being a good father because he had had a very unconventional upbringing, but he was determined to do it right. He felt bad about taking Savannah away from Sara, but he was not going to give up. I loved seeing him tackle all the bits like diapers, bathing and feeding. He was a bit clumsy but did his best. He had never planned to get married and have a family, but he sure stepped up when he found out about Savannah. I also liked the way that he understood what Sara was feeling but wasn't going to cave in. As he spent time with her learning about Savannah, he also started to have feelings about Sara that he didn't understand. He hadn't been exposed to love growing up and didn't really recognize it when he started to feel it. I liked the way that he tried to explain his feelings about going back for his friends and felt bad that Sara just didn't get it. I thought that his compromise at the end was just right.
show less
This story wasn't as engaging to me as Morgan's other books. It has a solid story, and I enjoyed the light mystery as the characters work to uncover secrets from the past, however, I didn't really connect with the characters at all. Doesn't help that Marc had trust issues and Torie was still keeping secrets from him towards the end of the book.

The writing also seemed a bit different. The suspicious part of me wants to know if this was ghost-written, but maybe Morgan was just trying a show more slightly different writing voice? I had trouble with some of the scenes (don't know if that's the right word for it) moving too fast. Torie would be in one place and moving along to another place after the paragraph. I had to stop to reread it because I wasn't sure what just happened.

Then there was this scene: Marc needed to borrow Billy's motorcycle in order to reach Torie and rescue her. Billy was horrified of the idea of his bike riding on sand, but Marc said there is a compacted trail, plus he needs to save Torie. Billy then said, "Oh. Well okay then."

Srsly. Not only was that dialogue lame, but it was totally unnecessary. This is why I believe this might have been ghost written, because a writer writing categories as long as Morgan has wouldn't waste the small word count limit on unnecessary dialogue. (Then again I could be wrong...)
show less
½
A typical category romance from Harlequin that I read for a team challenge I was doing.

The Good Stuff and the Bad Stuff: While this was a short and sweet book I wish more of it could have involved the twins as the title would suggest. Although they are talked about frequently their actual presence in the book is pretty minimal which is a shame. The plot of the book appears to only be about reuniting two people and the setting could be anywhere. Darcy and Mitch spend a lot of time working show more but for most of the book I was clueless as to what they did for a living. The setting and the character's backgrounds (mostly Darcy's) could have been elaborated upon a lot more. I would have given this book another star if it weren't for Darcy's character. She puts a lot of expectations on Mitch and gets mad at him all the time because he doesn't express his love for the twins within a day of finding out about them. Completely unreasonable in my eyes which made it difficult for me to be happy for her when everything was wrapped up in a nice bow at the end. Mitch wasn't a whole lot better though. He went from being a wandering soul to professing his love, devotion, and his promise to never leave Texas in a matter of 2 weeks.

In a Nutshell: My expectations weren't all that high when starting this book but the beginning was good and the ending came quickly. I might read another book by the author if I found a free copy somewhere.
show less
1.5 stars. I don't even know what to say about this outside of a cut other than I can't understand what authors are thinking when they write stories like this. It's like they type it up and never read it again.

Spoiler filed ranty synopsis of the plot under the cut.

First Darcy puts off telling him about the twins stupidly in the beginning even though he ended up giving her a perfect setting to do so. Why was it so important to do it the next morning and mess up his whole work day trying to show more work through it?

Apparently it wouldn't have messed up anything though because he doesn't care about the babies. At all. I don't know how long it's been since he found out, but he hasn't shown the slightest bit of interest in them, doesn't ask about them, hasn't asked to see them, talks about them only in abstract terms as some obligation to pay for. He hasn't once thought about them when the story is in his POV. Only about how much he wants Darcy, and could fall for her again, etc. etc. Nothing about his children. At all.

For her part, even though she is all a flutter about him and might be falling for him again, she does sometimes remember that he doesn't care about the children at all. But something tells me only a modest show of interest will get her to drop her underpants.

He broke into her house, moved his office and life in without her permission because he ~needs~ her and wants to convince her to marry him even though he plans on taking off in a year and only being around every so often. Oh, and he doesn't care about the kids.

She fucking lets him. She got pissy and did start to call the cops like I was yelling at her to, but then one statement from him about the police chief and desk sergeant being friends of his and she backs off. Then lets him stay. She then goes on to accommodate him by keeping the twins out of his hair instead of sending them in there when they're fussy and squalling. She doesn't force him to spend any time with the kids. He just goes about his work day asking for her help even though she took personal time from work. She even offers him meals.

While sitting in his makeshift squatting office the twins show up at the door and watch him twice. He feels absolutely nothing. Only in the most generic terms of being cute kids. He still feels nothing toward them. Feels no need to spend any time with them or get to know them. Nothing. It's so disgusting to me. He tells her he likes them, and not to make him a monster. She says, yeah, but he doesn't love him and a vague sense of affection isn't enough. I say how in the fuck does he like them he doesn't know them, hasn't spent a minute of time with them. Nor has he shown an iota of affection.

She finally lets him know in no uncertain terms she can only be with a man who loves her kids. He thinks to himself he can attempt that. BEING WITH HER IS THE ONLY REASON HE'LL ATTEMPT TO FEEL ANYTHING ABOUT HIS CHILDREN.

Oh and he still plans to take off in a year to go back to traveling the globe and being unreachable.

This is where everything stands and there is something like 36 pages left in this book.


AND I'M SUPPOSED TO ROOT FOR THESE PEOPLE TO BE TOGETHER? WHAT IN THE FUCK IS THE POINT OF THIS STORY??

Yeah, so, not only did this story not start making sense in the last 36 pages, it really just lost all sense period.

He never did make the effort toward the children on his own. Finally, they were like "WE WILL NOT BE IGNORED, DADDY" and forced themselves on him. Then he got into them. Mostly.

He wants this big development project that will take years to complete.

He ~loves Darcy.

He still plans to leave in a year. In fact, when she says she won't help him with the proposal for the development unless he stays to see it through he gets pissed because she knows he can't because he has to leave and go back to working overseas. Except, no. Not so much.

Then his parents show up. Well, his mother. Turns out she lied about his father's condition to get him home for a year. Then he finds out it's not true and he gets pissed off (that's why he decided to squat in Darcy's house). But she's all emo that her oldest son is pissed at her and enlists Darcy to soften him up. And Darcy equates the way he treats his parents to how he'll be as a family man. Okay.

Darcy calls their relationship for the like two days that he's acknowledged the twins' actual existence as idyllic. Oookay.

So he finally tells her why he hates his father who earlier in the story was referred to as a bad alcoholic. Turns out when he was in college he brought his girlfriend home and got her a summer job at the family business (...I bet you can't tell where this is going...) and shockingly he walked in on his father fucking her in his office. Then he runs home to get his mom to leave and she's basically all "so what, next time pick a better girl." So that's why he hates his father and is really pissy at his mother.

Darcy's basically all, "wow, that sucks. Get over it." Nice.

Of course then his father has a real heart attack and his mother wants Mitch to see him. Daddy is really sowwy. When Mitch balks she slaps him and tells him to grow up and stop being a brat. Everyone makes mistakes. Darcy, of course, agrees with this and equates their 48 hours in Paris of two single, consenting, adults having a brief romance as something they "shouldn't have done" to what his father did. OKAY.

But he gives in and goes to see daddy and they take the twins to see them (neither of his parents knew about them) and OMG HAPPY FAMILY.

Except not. Something happens. We don't know what though because IT IS NEVER FUCKING STATED EVER. Mitch comes home pissed off, hating them again and is determined to go back overseas as soon as possible. Except now he actually wants to take Darcy and the boys. Darcy rightfully tells him to fuck off and stop running away like a coward. He gets mad at her, leaves to get moving boxes, comes back but the twins are sleeping on his cot.

And suddenly he can't leave because he loves these two perfect children too much to ever leave them and he loves Darcy and this is all he needs in the world ever.

THE END.


I mean...what in the hell? What kind of story is that? And the ending made it even worse. It was like she realized she was only contracted for 180 pages and absolutely no more but she slow played most of the story so it all had to be wrapped up in 20 more pages of nonsense.

Did an editor read this and say, "oh, yeah, no, it totally makes sense, you're fine!"? Who in their right mind would want a Hero like this? Not everyone is into having kids, okay. Hell, I don't get the desire either, but I can't imagine feeling nothing for mine if one showed up. And he makes it worse because he keeps saying "I like kids, okay!"

Oh, and that cover is misleading on at least two fronts.
show less

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
171
Also by
17
Members
1,227
Popularity
#20,921
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
8
ISBNs
309
Languages
7

Charts & Graphs