![]() ![]() Somehow Grace is going to ensure that they don’t get married by posing as Melly’s maidservant/companion. Melly wants to have children more than anything and thus she can’t marry Dominic because after he found out he couldn’t weasel out of the betrothal contract, he declares theirs will be a “white marriage.” Seems that Melly’s father, Sir John, and Dominic wolfe’s father, the deceased Lord D’Acre made a betrothal contract when Melly and Dominic were still minors. Grace Merridew, the toast of the ton, has cut her golden red locks, died her hair, marred her perfect complexion with henna freckles and embarked on a journey to “save” her best friend, Melly Pettifer, from an unwanted marriage. It is replete with anachronistic characters, silly mental lusting, and a wafer thin plot. ![]() This book represents some of the worst themes, stereotypes and caricatures in the historical romance genre. I felt, at times, reading The Perfect Kiss that someone else wrote the book because it was so. ![]() I didn’t blog about it, but I would have given it a B. I hate to be saying the following things about your book, but I’ve got to be honest and it’s not going to be pretty. If you should perchance come by the blog and see your name, my suggestion would be to pass over this review. Jane Book Reviews / D Reviews Ebooks / Regency England 6 Comments JanuREVIEW: The Perfect Kiss by Anne Gracie ![]()
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