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Mary Balogh has won seven Waldenbook Awards and a B. Dalton Award for her bestselling romances, as well as a Romantic Times Lifetime Achievement Award. She is one of the romance genre's most popular and bestselling authors.

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8 reviews
After her cousin Jennifer's fiance, Viscount Kersey, used her in a scheme that wounded her and and her cousin's feelings quite deeply, she's decided that the volatile nature of love is emphatically not for her. Six years after her London debut, and her disastrous run-in with Kersey, Samantha Newman is quite happily unmarried. Now visiting her cousin in the country, she decides to take a long walk to put some space between herself and the happy young family. She encounters a charming landscape artist named Hartley Wade when her walk leads her onto the property of the Marquess of Carew. Instantly she's at ease with him, falling effortlessly into easy conversation and lapsing into comfortable silences. Quickly they develop a friendship, show more meeting secretly in the afternoon to walk the marquess' lands and chat amiably.

Hartley is a bit more than just the well-spoken, limping gardener she presumes him to be, as he's the Marquess of Carew himself. Surprised to find the stunningly beautiful woman recognizes neither his person nor his name, he plays along with her misperception. Crippled at a young age, leaving him with a twisted arm and a lame leg, he's wary of women pursuing him for his fortune alone. When Samantha seems as taken with him as he is with her, despite believing him a mere gardener, he can hardly believe his luck. Suddenly it seems he could have what he had always assumed could never be - a woman to love who loved him for who he was.

This is a love at first sight story at its heart. Immediately upon meeting Samantha, Hartley acknowledges to himself that he's in love with her. Samantha clearly does as well, though she won't use that particular word herself. Balogh does a smashing job of showing their mutual attraction through their easy conversation, peaceful silences and shared thoughts. I immediately came away with the impression that they were old dear friends meeting one another for the first time. Having a hero be enthusiastic about finding a woman to love and comfortable to admit it to himself was a wonderful change of pace.

I liked how Balogh stretched the story out on the characters insecurities without resorting to a Big Misunderstanding. Lord Kersey's reappearance upsets and confuses them both in different ways. While they both react poorly to the stresses, they do it in a way consistent with their personalities and their dynamic as a couple and grow closer as a result of it.

Definitely a cute story about the fine line between love and friendship. I'd give it a 4, I think. It's good, but it's not amazing.
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Samantha Newman has been spending the winter at her cousin's country home, when on an early spring walk she meets the landscape gardener, Hartley Wade, for the estate next door. She immediately feels comfortable with this 'ordinary' looking man with a limp and a deformed right hand. Over the next 2 weeks they meet 3 more times, walking, viewing the lakes and hills he is transforming. Then she and her aunt head back to London for the season. In London she is pursued by the handsome man who ruined her cousin and betrayed her 6 years prior. When she runs into Hartley she is thrilled and her eager welcome leads him to offer her marriage. Here is safety from pursuit! Of course all is not as it seems. This is a typical Balogh plot and well show more executed. Very enjoyable. show less
A tender love story about friendship first, followed by love. The hero has a pronounced limp & mangled right hand from a childhood accident, but he has a strong sense of his own self worth. The love scenes are tender but not particularly steamy. More romance than steam. A sweet, slow build love story.
The hero of this historical romance was so endearing and I liked how the romance developed but the story moved rather slow and the plot was somewhat predictable. After a betrayal six years ago Samantha vows to never fall in love then at her cousin's country home she meets a friendly neighbor Hartley.
Pretty good. Heroine perectly beautiful, hero has severe limp and other problems due to a childhood accident. I thought the heroine was a little naive considering her age and experience and rolled my eyes at regency era kickboxing, though for all I know, that's historically accurate.
Romance
Hero with a crippled hand and somewhat lame.

Really super nasty antagonist revisited from Dark Angel. Heroine was a secondary character who was badly hurt emotionally by the bad guy. Hero has a small snit but gets over it well, and is really appealing person in the long run.
Un protagonista maschile che conquista con dolcezza, una lettura piacevole.

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173+ Works 44,745 Members
Mary Balogh was born in Swansea, Wales on March 24, 1944. She received a B.A. with honors from the University of Wales in 1965. From 1967 to 1988, she taught high school English in Saskatchewan, Canada, becoming principal of the school in 1982. Her first novel, A Masked Deception, was published in 1985 and she won the Romantic Times Award for best show more new Regency writer. Since then, she has written more than 60 novels and has received a lifetime achievement award for her work in the genre of historical romance. Her works include The Wood Nymph, Christmas Promise, The Plumed Bonnet, Famous Heroine, A Matter of Class, No Man's Mistress, More than a Mistress, One Night for Love, and Only a Kiss. Her title's Someone to Hold and Someone to Care made The New York Times Bestseller List. (Bowker Author Biography) Mary Balogh grew up in Wales. She later came to Canada to teach & there she began a second career as an author. (Publisher Provided) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Lord Carew's Bride
Original title
Lord Carew's Bride
Original publication date
1995-06
People/Characters
Samantha Newman; Hartley Wade, Marquess of Carew; Gabriel Fisher, Earl of Thornhill; Jennifer Winward; Lord Francis Kneller; Lord Lionel Kersey, Earl of Rushford (show all 7); Alistair Munro, Duke of Bridgwater
Important places
London, England, UK

Classifications

Genres
Romance, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PR9199.3 .B362Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureEnglish literature: Provincial, local, etc.
BISAC

Statistics

Members
193
Popularity
169,069
Reviews
7
Rating
(3.99)
Languages
English, French, German
Media
Paper
ISBNs
2
ASINs
3