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Lovely, high born Willa Trent was an orphan, raised by a local, somewhat odd family in the country, who want nothing but the best for their girl. So when she drags the unconscious man she accidentally hit with a slingshot home, they arrange a hasty marriage and pack the couple off with best wishes. Armed with a groggy husband and a new future, Willa's pie-eyed optimism has no limits...until she discovers the secret, dangerous world of Nathaniel Stonewell, Earl of Reardon, a.k.a. "Lord show more Treason." Though Nathaniel is reviled by most of England for his devious plot against the Crown, he is, in reality, a member of an elite cadre of secret royal defenders on a daring undercover mission. He must keep his secrets at all cost, especially from Willa. And yet, he is enchanted...though he stubbornly refuses to surrender to his passion. Far better, he tells himself, to turn his back on love than risk everything for it. Luckily, his bride has other plans... show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
My first Celeste Bradley book. I hope all the others are as good as this.
Two memorable characters — especially jinx-minx Willa with her passion for Linnaeus and her irrepressible sexuality. The story is competently covered in the Goodreads summary, so I'll mention just a few weaknesses in an almost perfect Regency romp.
Alas, not even Ms Bradley can avoid slipping into anachronistic vocabulary and phrases. The saga of the Royal Four pushes the book close to the dividing line between historical romance and historical fantasy. Basil and Daphne's sudden ostracism at the end may have made for a cathartic come-uppance, but left Basil's involvement in earlier shenanigans unexplained. Or maybe I missed something.
Otherwise, once Willa show more unleashed her slingshot in the opening pages of the book, I willingly suspended almost all disbelief and went along for a throughly enjoyable ride.
Were I rating this book objectively, I'd give it four stars. Subjectively evaluated, it gets five stars for the unalloyed pleasure it gave this reader. show less
Two memorable characters — especially jinx-minx Willa with her passion for Linnaeus and her irrepressible sexuality. The story is competently covered in the Goodreads summary, so I'll mention just a few weaknesses in an almost perfect Regency romp.
Alas, not even Ms Bradley can avoid slipping into anachronistic vocabulary and phrases. The saga of the Royal Four pushes the book close to the dividing line between historical romance and historical fantasy. Basil and Daphne's sudden ostracism at the end may have made for a cathartic come-uppance, but left Basil's involvement in earlier shenanigans unexplained. Or maybe I missed something.
Otherwise, once Willa show more unleashed her slingshot in the opening pages of the book, I willingly suspended almost all disbelief and went along for a throughly enjoyable ride.
Were I rating this book objectively, I'd give it four stars. Subjectively evaluated, it gets five stars for the unalloyed pleasure it gave this reader. show less
The Royal Four series is an offshoot to the Liars Club historical romance series. Each of the books can be read as a stand alone, however, I would recommend reading them in order to enjoy exactly what has led up to the point of each book. As I read the Liars Club books, I hoped that there would be something special done regarding the Royal Four, the leaders of the Liars Club spies.
It's been too long for me to give a detailed review, but I did, and still do, enjoy Ms Bradley's books, the characters were in turns frustrating, sneaky (as all spies should be), and made for great Heroes and Heroines.
It's been too long for me to give a detailed review, but I did, and still do, enjoy Ms Bradley's books, the characters were in turns frustrating, sneaky (as all spies should be), and made for great Heroes and Heroines.
The first chapter of this book didn't impress me and the use of nicknames and secret spy names almost confused me enough to put the book down. And I'm not a stupid girl. However, the heroine of this book was so delightful that she kept me going all the way through the book and I ended up loving it. Willa turned out to be the opposite of almost all romance heroine's I've read and I couldn't get enough of her.
Celeste Bradley is an author whose books I've often enjoyed in the past, but I really have mixed feelings about this one.
It requires a great stretch of the imagination to go along with the story as she sets it up. I found that difficult. That's v-e-r-y d-i-f-f-i-c-u-l-t. But because I've enjoyed her books in the past, I plodded along, my goal being to reach page 100 before I gave up. At some point the book caught fire and I found myself staying up into the wee hours to finish it. Who knew? lol
My second major problem is that the author and the heroine look alike. I find this to be extreme self-indulgence. Ms Bradley, it bothers me.
To sum up the story line: Willa and Nathaniel marry under totally unbelievable circumstances. I'm show more embarrassed to repeat them. He's less than happy about the whole thing because 'he has a mission.' right. She's totally wonderful, has the right response for all occasions, is charming, loveable, and looks just like the author. show less
It requires a great stretch of the imagination to go along with the story as she sets it up. I found that difficult. That's v-e-r-y d-i-f-f-i-c-u-l-t. But because I've enjoyed her books in the past, I plodded along, my goal being to reach page 100 before I gave up. At some point the book caught fire and I found myself staying up into the wee hours to finish it. Who knew? lol
My second major problem is that the author and the heroine look alike. I find this to be extreme self-indulgence. Ms Bradley, it bothers me.
To sum up the story line: Willa and Nathaniel marry under totally unbelievable circumstances. I'm show more embarrassed to repeat them. He's less than happy about the whole thing because 'he has a mission.' right. She's totally wonderful, has the right response for all occasions, is charming, loveable, and looks just like the author. show less
I loved this book. Out of all the books in the Royal Four series this was the best one. You just had to love how Willa just ate away at Nathanial until he started to like her. It was quite entertaining. Nathanial was also very supportive of Willa, which was wonderful. The conflict and the characters worked well together, and I just could not put this book down. I loved a book that makes me laugh.
1.5 Just a little bit too silly to be funny.
TBR, Own Paperback, The Royal Four Series
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Author Information
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- To Wed a Scandalous Spy
- Original publication date
- 2005-02
- People/Characters
- Willa Trent; Nathaniel Stonewell, Earl of Reardon
- Important places
- England, UK
- Important events
- 1813
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 337
- Popularity
- 93,718
- Reviews
- 8
- Rating
- (4.00)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 3




























































