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The R A master spy with the face of a fallen angel and a darkly heroic past, Lord Robert Andreville returns to his ancestral home in Yorkshire after a dozen harrowing years spying against Napoleon. But nothing soothes his ravaged spirit until a determined young beauty sweeps into his life. the Runaway Half Mohawk and all American, Maxima Collins is a wary stranger in a strange land, but she will let nothing halt her journey to London to learn the truth about her father's sudden death-not show more even a self-appointed guardian who is all lazy charm and dangerous skill. Together they travel across England, evading pursuers and circling each other in a dance of desire, where truth is elusive and only passion is sure. Then dark secrets shatter their idyll-and only love has the power to heal the past. The Fallen Angels series: Book 1: Thunder & Roses Book 2: Dancing on the Wind Book 3: Petals in the Storm Book 4: Angel Rogue Book 5: Shattered Rainbows Book 6: River of Fire Book 7: One Perfect Rose. show less

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I've been enjoying this older series a lot. The writing is excellent, and the characters are fascinating. Robin was a spy during the Napoleonic wars but has come home with what today would be called severe PTSD. It isn't helped that the woman he wanted to marry fell in love with someone else. He falls in with Maxie, an American woman who is also part Mohawk, trying to get to London to investigate her father's death. The two end up walking with many adventures along the way.
I loved the section about the drovers' roads and learned a lot. I've hiked along one such road in Yorkshire and saw the ruins of a Drovers Inn, but reading about such an actual drive is more immersive. The details about the geese, for example, were riveting.
The show more romance is lovely though I thought the ending a bit rushed and flat. It's still a 4.5 stars. show less
½
Angel Rogue is the fourth book in Mary Jo Putney’s Fallen Angels series. Robin was introduced in the previous book, Petals in the Storm, and is now nursing a broken heart after the heroine of that book, with whom he was in love, married another. His days as a spy for the crown are now over, too, leaving him feeling rather adrift. Then one day an exotic beauty quite literally stumbles over him in the forest. He soon learns that Maxie is an American of half-Native heritage whose father was English. She’s traveling alone, walking the length of England to get to London to investigate her father’s untimely demise, which she has reason to believe may have involved foul play. Being the consummate gentleman, Robin can’t allow a young show more woman, even one disguised as a boy, to travel the dangerous roads alone, so he insists upon accompanying her. At first, she’s not too pleased to have the company, but after he proves useful in fending of several attacks by ne’er-do-wells, she starts to warm up to his presence. As they continue the journey together, they get to know one another and begin to fall in love. But although he very much wants to marry Maxie, Robin is convinced that he’s not great husband material and that no woman should want to wed him. For her part, Maxie has fallen in love with Robin, too, but longs for him to love her back and isn’t sure if he’s capable of that.

Maxie grew up straddling both the white world of her father and the Mohawk world of her mother, but never quite felt like she belonged in either. After her mother died when she was young, Maxie traveled around the eastern states with her father who was a bookseller. She thought it was a pretty good life, but then her father, who was also the second son of an English aristocrat, decided to return to his homeland. In England, Maxie feels like even more of an anomaly, especially after her father died on a trip to London. Now alone in the world, except for her extended relations, she starts planning to return to the States, until she overhears her aunt and uncle discussing her father’s death. It’s then that she realizes they’re hiding something from her about his demise and fears that they may have had something to do with it. Not knowing if she can trust them, she runs away in the dead of night, disguised as a boy, headed for London on foot to investigate what happened to her father and maybe to visit an aunt with whom she’d had amiable correspondence. Not long into her journey, she leaves the road to avoid being spotted by other travelers and literally trips over a man who is napping in the forest. He’s the most gorgeous man she’s ever seen, and when he hears that she’s traveling alone, he insists upon accompanying her. Maxie doesn’t really want his company, but after they’re accosted a couple of times, she realizes that maybe she is better off with a protector. Even though she doesn’t really believe any of the stories he tells her, Robin proves to be a charming companion, and soon she finds herself trusting him and falling in love with him. But if he can’t love her back, they may not have a future. Maxie is a fierce and spirited heroine who exhibits American moxie alongside her Mohawk appreciation for nature and life. I like that she was able to accept Robin for who he was and show compassion for the pain he experiences from the things he was forced to do as a spy.

Robin is a cousin to Lucien (Dancing on the Wind) and is the friend and former lover of Maggie (Petals in the Storm). I really liked him in the previous book of the series, where my heart broke a little for him. He loved Maggie, but she unfortunately didn’t feel the same. However, they’ve remained good friends anyway. Robin’s days as a spy are now over and he’s returned to his brother’s estate, not sure what he’s going to do now. He’s simply been whiling away the days, when Maxie stumbles over him. When he finds out she’s traveling to London alone, he has nothing better to do and decides to go with her on a lark. Their journey becomes perilous when they’re attacked several times along the way by a man sent by Maxie’s uncle to find her. It turns out to be quite the adventure, though, and Robin hasn’t felt this alive in a while, mostly thanks to his traveling companion. However, after being a spy for so long, Robin has trouble with showing his true self to Maxie. He also harbors some self-hatred for things he had to do during his espionage days and feels that he might not be a fit husband for any woman. Deep down he’s lonely, though, and Maxie proves to be everything he could want in a partner, but if he can’t open up his heart, they may not have a future together. I still liked Robin in his own book, but I couldn’t help feeling like he took a little too long to open up to Maxie. It’s pretty late in the story before he shows any real vulnerabilities, and until then he’s just the spontaneous guy who has a dozen different personas that he can put on with ease, depending on the situation. I understood his fears about Maxie not wanting to know the real Robin, but at the same time, I felt this left some distance between them. I loved him, though, for behaving as a gentleman and treating Maxie like any other lady in spite of her heritage and her being an American, both of which give her different views on relationships.

Angel Rogue is almost entirely a road trip romance with our protagonists spending nearly three-quarters of the book traveling across England. This is usually a trope that I enjoy, but for some reason, it seemed rather slow-paced. Admittedly the long stretches on the road are punctuated a number of times by some exciting chase and fight scenes with the guys Maxie’s uncle sends after her, so I’m not sure why I felt that way. Maybe it’s because the mystery of whether Maxie’s father met with foul play is left entirely for the last couple of chapters. Or maybe it’s because it took a while for the characters to develop. I liked Robin and Maxie and thought they were well-suited for one another. However, as I mentioned before, Robin takes a good long time before he genuinely opens up to Maxie, and until then, I wasn’t getting a great sense of who he was because of him hiding behind various personas. I think he could have been a deeply tortured hero, but he doesn’t reveal that part of himself until pretty late in the story, and even then, it’s mostly handled in a single night. I did, however, very much enjoy the secondary romance between Robin’s brother, Giles, and Maxie’s aunt, Desdemona. Their part of the story has an enemies-to-lovers vibe with Desdemona sweeping into Giles’s study in full pique over her missing niece and Giles trying to defend his brother from her accusations. However, as they chase the younger couple across England, they, too, develop a fondness for one another that was endearing. I also enjoyed the glimpses of our past heroes and heroines, all of whom attend a dinner party at Rafe and Maggie’s house. Michael, the hero of the next book, Shattered Rainbows, was seen there briefly, too. Even though the way in which the narrative was told wasn’t perfect for me, I did very much like all the characters, which is a major plus, so despite being a tad underwhelmed after finishing it, Angel Rogue was still a pretty good read.
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The male lead, Robin, is well named. He is Robin Goodfellow, that sly fellow that tricks and plays and slippery frips. And beneath it all are the things he’s done. This inherent sense that he must conceal because he believes himself empty.

Maxi (or Maxima) is a dark stranger in a blond land. American when she should be English. Native American when everyone is telling ther she should be whiter than white bread. Aching and empty.

It’s a nice story with no real bad guys, just people doing what they do to get by.
Heavens above this was a wonderful book. I felt so bad that Robert "Robin" Andreville didn't get Maggie in DANCING ON THE WIND. He so needed someone to love and care for him. I am sure the spying is never easy but in the time period of this book had to be brutal. Robin was a spy for twelve years and the things that he had to do for God and country left him at the breaking point. Ms. Putney does a very good job of showing how bad Robin's emotional state has become. The torture he went through at the end of DANCING ON THE WIND did help I am sure. I like Robin. He is intelligent, caring, cunning. He is also very, very lonely. I was really happy to read this story and follow Robin on his journey to healing and acceptance of what he had to show more do so England could stop Napoleon.

Maxima Collins is also intelligent, caring and stronger than she looks. She isn't afraid to walk across England to find out what happened to her father. She is also a easy travel companion as Robin finds out during their journey. I also think that she is the perfect mate for Robin. Both of these people have been through so much that they deserve to find someone that will understand and care for them.

There is also a secondary romance between Robin's brother and Maxima's aunt. I was glad that Ms. Putney included these in the story. They both needed to find a companion that would heal the scars from their previous marriages. I liked both these people and cheered them on as they realized that they could love each other.

We also get to see the characters from the previous books. It is always nice to catch up with the characters from the earlier stories so you know what has been happening in their lives. This book did have a little more sex included in the story. It isn't up to today standards but it was nice to see the characters getting to know each other as the story progressed. This was a quick read, much faster than I thought it would be. The reader get to see the lives of the lower classes and we get an idea of the countryside about London. There is always little bits of information in these stories and that is part why I loved them so much.
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Another exotic heroine by MJP. This heroine, Maxima Collins, is half American Indian. She is well-suited to the spy hero, Robin. It's a travel romance.
Es la historia en que Máxima, mejor conocida como Maxie, conoce a Lord Robert Andreville, o Robin, y juntos resuelven el misterio de cómo murió el padre de Maxie. Maxie está en Driham, Inglaterra, con sus primas y tíos que, por cierto, no le caen del todo bien. Ella se encuentra guardando luto por la muerte de su padre, quien recientemente murió, y sabe que no fue en las mejores circunstancias gracias a un comentario que escuchó a través de la puerta de su tío y tía. Sabe que ellos no le dirán la verdad, aunque les preguntara, y si contamos que ella tampoco le cae bien a su tía y que solo está ahí por compromiso y por ser lo que su padre deseaba, es lógica la razón por la que no le dirían la verdad. Ella decide show more escaparse y averiguarlo por sí misma. show less
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111+ Works 15,323 Members
Romance writer Mary Jo Putney was born in New York and graduated from Syracuse University with degrees in English literature and Industrial design. She served as the art editor of The New Internationalist magazine in London and worked as a designer in California before settling in Baltimore, Maryland in 1980 to run her own freelance graphic design show more business Her first novel was a traditional Regency romance, which sold in one week. Signet liked the novel so much that it offered Putney a three-book contract. In 1987 that first novel, The Diabolical Baron, was published. Since then, she has published more than twenty-nine books. Her books have been ranked on the national bestseller lists of the New York Times, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly. Most of her books have been historical romance. She has also begun writing fantasy romance and romantic fantasy. Putney has won the Romance Writers of America RITA Award twice, for Dancing on the Wind and The Rake and the Reformer and has been a RITA finalist nine times. She is on the Romance Writers of America Honor Roll for bestselling authors, and has been awarded two Romantic Times Career Achievement Awards and four Golden Leaf Awards. Her titles include: Dark Mirror, Dark Passage, No Longer a Gentleman, Never Less than a Lady, and Nowhere Near Respectable. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Waring, Siobhan (Narrator)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Angel Rogue
Original title
The Rogue and the Runaway
Original publication date
1995-04
People/Characters
Robert Andreville; Maxima Collins
Important places
England, UK
Important events
Georgian Era (1711 | 1837); Regency Era (1811 | 1820)
Dedication
To the furry friend who's always there.

With special thanks to Theresa Jemison, for letting me use her Mohawk name, Kanawiosta.
First words
The great estate of Wolverhampton graced the Vale of York like a royal crown, its placid majesty dating from the late days of the seventeenth century.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Then he whispered, "Now, Kanawiosta, show me again how to listen to the wind."
Blurbers
Jayne Ann Krentz; Laura Kinsale
Original language
English
Disambiguation notice
Angel Rogue (1995) (revised from The Rogue and the Runaway (1990))

Classifications

Genres
Romance, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3566 .U83Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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ISBNs
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ASINs
2