Elisabeth Hobbes
Author of The Blacksmith’s Wife
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Works by Elisabeth Hobbes
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Statistics
- Works
- 16
- Members
- 115
- Popularity
- #170,830
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 15
- ISBNs
- 65
- Languages
- 2
Ned Blake is . . . let’s leave him a man of mystery for now. Seems a little shady, his job is a little odd, he seems very capable but at just what? He has regrets, resentments, secrets, is he hiding or running from something? Not sure, but there’s something about him – besides that devastatingly handsome face – that makes us want to find out.
Ned and Florence’s first meet is a hilarious scene that sets the stage for the rest of this excellent story. Serious undertones, maybe a smidge of attraction, a lot of questions and assumptions.
After their encounter Florence comes up with what she believes is a brilliant plan and the perfect answer to her predicament. She’ll hire Ned to pretend to be a nobleman, a viscount maybe. How hard can it be? Her brother-in-law is a Lord and she’ll just ask him if she has questions. After she’s fooled her father she’ll confess the deception and her father will immediately see that a title is meaningless. Probably most Englishmen, noble or not, including Ned, realize there is more to being a part of the aristocracy than a young American heiress can teach in a few weeks, and after witnessing more of her father’s shameless, fawning behavior it’s doubtful he’ll ever give up. But Florence is very determined and more than a little desperate, so the lessons begin.
And this wonderful story just takes off. Florence is solid in her certainty that she’ll pull this off. Ned is a very fast learner, at times even pointing things out to Florence that she hadn’t thought of. Their encounters are funny, tender, touching, infuriating. Is that little smidge of attraction between them growing? It can’t be. She knows nothing about him really; he knows more about . . . whatever it is he knows and we don’t know – yet.
It was so much fun watching this story unwind and unfold that more detail in a review would spoil the pleasure of reading it for yourself. It’s set in a time when rules and social mores were everything, for young women, married and unmarried, for first sons and not-first sons. It’s well-plotted with perfect pacing and interesting, intriguing, well-developed characters who make you smile, laugh or want to strangle them.
Thanks to author Elisabeth Hobbes and Harper Collins UK, One More Chapter for providing an advance copy of My Fair Lord. I had previously read Hobbes’ work; it was very different but equally engaging and satisfying. I guess a great writer is a great writer is a great writer. Just look up ‘Elisabeth Hobbes’ and start reading. I voluntarily leave this review; all opinions are my own.… (more)