The Spanish Rose

by Shirlee Busbee

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A historical romance from the author of MIDNIGHT MASQUERADE, telling the story of a beautiful Spanish girl who falls in love with her father's sworn enemy, an English pirate.

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1 review
This type of romance book is not very common in today's romance, and was written during a time (70s, 80s, and even into the early 90s) when certain elements of romance were more common: the harsh alpha male hero and "forced seductions" (in other words, borderline rape scenes) were the norm. Nothing wrong with this type of romance, it has its own unique charm and in some ways I enjoy reading these older romances more than ones written by today's authors.

I have found that the historical romances written during this time period were very detailed and that the authors researched into the history of the setting of their stories (another author that comes to mind was Kathleen E. Woodiwiss). This is the 2nd Shirlee Busbee book I've read and show more the author did an incredible job in laying the background of what was occurring politically between England and Spain and their colonies in the New World.

The story is set in 1664-1668 and takes place mostly in the islands of the Caribbean. There are pirates, raiding, and fighting, and while reading The Spanish Rose it really did bring to mind swashbuckling pirates and captive damsels in distress. The descriptions of the battles between the English buccaneers and the Spaniards and the lush tropical islands of the Caribbean were vividly described that I could almost picture the scenes in my mind.

The hero, Gabriel Lancaster, is captured by the heroine's brother, Diego Delgato, during a fight at sea in which his young wife is killed and his sister taken captive. He is made a slave on the Delgato plantation on Santa Domingo for a year before he escapes where he later joins the Brethren of the Coast, a band of English pirates and plans his revenge. His revenge involves using the heroine, Maria Delgato, to strike back and he waits and bides his time. When he finally gets a hold of Maria, his plans for revenge backfire as he finds himself falling for his captive.

I really enjoyed this book, but the hero, Gabriel Lancaster, and the heroine, Maria Delgato could get really frustrating at times. The hero and heroine fought a lot throughout the book, and their desire for each other and determination not to give in could get tiring at times. I could understand that there was bitterness and hatred between the English Lancasters and Spanish Delgatos (all stemming from an event 100 years in the past!), but I felt the hero and heroine were too stubborn in their pride in not admitting to themselves how they truly felt for one another. They bicker, fight, make up until almost the very end of the book when they finally can no longer deny their love.

Despite the character flaws of the hero and heroine, I'd still recommend reading this book, the emotions and thoughts behind the characters were fully fleshed out and there was no question behind their behaviors and actions. Not to mention, the incredible richness of the scenery and setting of the story more than made up for the small annoyances I had with the hero and heroine.
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37 Works 2,118 Members
Shirlee Busbee was born on August 9, 1941 in San Jose, California. She received a certificate from the Burbank Business College in 1962. She has worked as a receptionist for the Marin County Title and Abstract Co., as plant supervisor for Fairfield Title Co., and as secretary and drafting technician for the County Parks Department of Fairfield, show more California. She started writing historical romance novels in 1977. She has written over 18 books including Gypsy Lady, Lady Vixen, Love a Dark Rider, A Heart for the Taking, and Love Be Mine. She has received numerous awards including the Romantic Times Reviewers' Choice Award and Affaire de Coeur's Silver and Bronze Pen Awards. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Spanish Rose
Original publication date
1986
First words
A sudden burst of drunken laughter from the waterfront taberna spilled onto the rough cobblestone streets and caused the slim figure skulking in the nearby alley to jump.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)And it would be wondrous, as wondrous, as glorious as the glowing, brilliant fingers of dawn which suddenly blazed across the Dark Angel, painted gold as she sailed gracefully toward Port Royal, toward home, toward love. . . .

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Romance
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3552 .U82 .S62Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
98
Popularity
327,995
Reviews
1
Rating
(4.00)
Languages
English, French, German
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
9
ASINs
2