
Available:*
Library | Shelf Number | Material Type | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
Searching... Cragieburn Library | GUHR ROM | English Fiction | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Hillary Library | GUHR ROM | English Fiction | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Wyebank Library | GUHR ROM | English Fiction | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
Summary
Summary
"Passionate and exciting, Laura Lee Guhrke is always a delight to read."
--Christina Dodd
New York Times bestseller Laura Lee Guhrke's delicious Abandoned at the Altar series has historical romance readers eagerly saying, "I do!" Trouble at the Wedding is the third unforgettable walk down the aisle by the always delightful RITA Award winning author. The marriage ceremony of a Victorian heiress to the "perfect man" is most rudely interrupted by a meddlesome duke who's convinced the bewitching lady is making a the biggest mistake of her life. Fans of Julia Quinn and Elizabeth Boyle will most certainly want to be in attendance to discover why Ms. Quinn herself calls the romance novels of Laura Lee Guhrke, "Better than chocolate."
Reviews (1)
Library Journal Review
American heiress Annabel Wheaton is going to marry a British earl aboard the Atlantic. It's part of savvy Annabel's plan to bury her poor Mississippi roots so deep they will no longer be a source of humiliation for her or her younger sister. The gold mines her father bequeathed to her are almost worth his having abandoned the family when she was just a child. If a respectable husband comes with a price tag, so be it. Annabel's Uncle Arthur hates the idea of her loveless marriage to the Earl of Rumsford. After meeting Christian Du Quesne, the Duke of Scarborough, Arthur proposes a business deal no impoverished duke can ignore: Christian will sail on the Atlantic and convince Annabel that marrying her earl is a bad idea, leading her to break the engagement. It's a wild scheme at best, but when Christian meets the sassy, stubborn Southern gal, he develops some wild ideas of his own. Verdict These mismatched protagonists struggle to overcome their very different (or are they?) pasts. Neither bargains on love entering the equation, and both discover how far off the mark their calculations are. Guhrke (Scandal of the Year) never fails to deliver. Romance fans will take to this engaging clash of cultures like flies on a june bug.-Bette-Lee Fox, Library Journal (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.