Beauty and The Baron
by Deborah Hale
On This Page
Description
Could She Defeat His Darkness and Bring Him Back to Life? Handsome rakehell turned scarred recluse Lord Lucius Daventry had returned from battle intent on forgetting the past. Yet once home, Lucius was presented with one final mission: marry Angela Lacewood and grant his ailing grandfather's dying wish. Or at least pretend to marry. But the young beauty he remembered was now an exquisite woman. A woman strong enough to breach the walls he hid behind and steal his heart.Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
This was very much an impulse buy for me. I was browsing my local used bookstore and saw it on the shelf next to a book I had wishlisted. So without further ado I picked it up to buy as well. I'm very happy I did as I think this was a well written 'Beauty and the Beast' romance.
Poor Angela--literally, she is the poor relation staying with her Aunt and Uncle. In an effort to be useful and not turned out she is at their beck and call, making few demands of her own and resigning herself to her lot in life. Lucius however turns that all upside down. She gave up all her dreams of finding a man to love her--didn't she?
I thought both leads were vastly entertaining. Despite their argumentative natures--the only thing they both agreed upon at show more first was that they loved the Earl, Lucius' grandfather and Angela's friend--it was fun to watch Lucius grumble and growl. Or Angela get into a tizzy. Their interactions were heated, tense and passionate. I was a little uneasy about their plan to dupe the Earl, especially after he expressed such joy over their finally seeing sense (he was playing matchmaker), but the Earl acknowledged that he knew they weren't madly in love. So I felt better for it.
We don't see very much of Angela's Uncle and Aunt, not until much closer to the end and I'm glad they were only briefly shown. Extremely aggravating and annoying, greedy and tactless...the list of their sins is numerous. The poor Reverend is perhaps dealt with the worse. He really did seem like such a nice fellow, but maybe that is what was his downfall. Lucius made it seem like such a good plan, that it was all for Angela's good, that I guess the Reverend just blinded himself to the obvious disinterest and distaste Angela felt (not for him, she liked him as a friend, but for what the plan was).
A fun quick read I recommend to anyone who likes Regency romances. show less
Poor Angela--literally, she is the poor relation staying with her Aunt and Uncle. In an effort to be useful and not turned out she is at their beck and call, making few demands of her own and resigning herself to her lot in life. Lucius however turns that all upside down. She gave up all her dreams of finding a man to love her--didn't she?
I thought both leads were vastly entertaining. Despite their argumentative natures--the only thing they both agreed upon at show more first was that they loved the Earl, Lucius' grandfather and Angela's friend--it was fun to watch Lucius grumble and growl. Or Angela get into a tizzy. Their interactions were heated, tense and passionate. I was a little uneasy about their plan to dupe the Earl, especially after he expressed such joy over their finally seeing sense (he was playing matchmaker), but the Earl acknowledged that he knew they weren't madly in love. So I felt better for it.
We don't see very much of Angela's Uncle and Aunt, not until much closer to the end and I'm glad they were only briefly shown. Extremely aggravating and annoying, greedy and tactless...the list of their sins is numerous. The poor Reverend is perhaps dealt with the worse. He really did seem like such a nice fellow, but maybe that is what was his downfall. Lucius made it seem like such a good plan, that it was all for Angela's good, that I guess the Reverend just blinded himself to the obvious disinterest and distaste Angela felt (not for him, she liked him as a friend, but for what the plan was).
A fun quick read I recommend to anyone who likes Regency romances. show less
Liked it it was a good story
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Harlequin Historical (655)
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- Le bal des ombres
- Original title
- Beauty and the Baron
- Original publication date
- 2003
- People/Characters
- Angela Lacewood; Lord Lucius Daventry
- Important places*
- Northamptonshire, Angleterre
- Dedication
- For Tracy Farrell, who has given me the most wonderful editorial support from the moment I joined Harlequin Historicals. If I'm able to live up to her faith in me, I know I'll last long and go far in this business.
An... (show all)d in memory of my adored grandfather, John MacDonald, who remains cherished in my heart and still speaks to me when I listen for his voice. - First words
- Northamptonshire, England, 1818
"Who shut the curtains on such a lovely day?" - Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"I'll stock up on plenty of paper and ink," Lucius assured her as his lips closed over hers in a kiss that held all the beauty of twilight and all the promise of a fresh new dawn.
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 82
- Popularity
- 388,914
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.23)
- Languages
- English, French
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 1


























































