![]() ![]() ![]() Traits are inherited, and Boadicea (she prefers Betsy, as one would with a name like Boadicea) knows this because her older brother told her the very same thing about his horses. The second duchess, after all, ran off with a Prussian, and Boadicea’s little sister looks rather like said Prussian. Then, when she actually went to school, she found she’d been tarred with her mother’s brush. She grew up isolated at the Wilde estate, dreaming of having friends she could play with and talk to. Also, all of the Duke’s biological children are named for warriors.Įnter Lady Boadicea Wilde. The Duke has had three wives, so we’re looking at adult sons of marriageable age at the same time the Duke’s third wife is delivering a baby in the first book of the series. And also some offspring not his own that have been adopted by him. If you are unfamiliar with the Wildes, we are dealing with the numerous offspring of the Duke of Lindow. This fourth book in Eloisa James’s latest series is the first about a daughter of the Wilde family. Overall: A fun read, but not inspiring the post-read glow of older EJ novelsĪh, the Wildes. Plot: Not a great trope, further reading works us out of some of the trope traps ![]() Heat Factor: There is an involved encounter after promises and declarations are made ![]()
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