This style choice does not intimidate, irk, or befuddle me to the point of needing to vent at Amazon along with a low star score. The author chose to write Omniscient style, and it didn't bother me one bit. It isn't a bad story and it isn't written so horribly juvenile as to be impossible to comprehend or enjoy - save the odd punctuation choices and misspellings as the chapters progressed. Liked it a little better the second time, but not well enough to give it a glowing review. But falling in love? That’s an entirely different matter. Suddenly, this very arrogant gentleman, who also happens to be charming and attractive, makes himself at home at Brightwood Manor, and proceeds to court her!īeatrice knows one thing for certain. She was happy being a spinster happy running her father’s estates while amassing a fortune of her own happy tending to the needs of her community and most of all, she was happy not having a man around to tell her what to do.īut when Beatrice accidentally shoots her new neighbor, the Earl of Drennan, her life turns upside-down. She was known as The Spinster of Brightwood Manor, and that suited Lady Beatrice O’Brien just fine.
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