Friday, March 7, 2014

Once a Gentleman / Candice Hern 373 p.

Nicholas Parrish has no intentions of getting married.  He certainly would not chose Prudence.  He is political.  He has a desire to effect changes in England for the workers.  Marriage is not on his horizon.  When Prudence, an employee of The Ladies' Fashionable Cabinet, the magazine he and his sister run from their house, falls asleep at her desk.  Her father comes demanding marriage.  He does the gentlemanly thing and marries Prudence.   He plans a marriage in name only, that is until, Prudence becomes his wife.

A possible read-alike for Mary Balogh.

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