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The Golden Feather (Signet Regency Romance)
The Golden Feather - Signet Regency Romance
Author: Amanda McCabe
The Golden Secret — After the death of her husband, Caroline Aldritch is shocked to learn his only legacy to her is the Golden Feather, a gaming establishment. Faced with a life of poverty, the genteel widow hatches a desperate scheme: She will don a silk mask, call herself Mrs. Archer, and risk great scandal by running the Golden Feather. no one...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780451207289
ISBN-10: 0451207289
Publication Date: 11/5/2002
Pages: 224
Rating:
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
 6

3.4 stars, based on 6 ratings
Publisher: Signet
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 2 Book Reviews of "The Golden Feather Signet Regency Romance"

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reviewed The Golden Feather (Signet Regency Romance) on + 31 more book reviews
A quick, entertaining read about a widow left only with a gaming establishment as her portion. Her troubles while contriving to earn enough to eventually sell out, then take her place in society, complicated by the ubiquitous 'notorious rake', lead one from page to page.
reviewed The Golden Feather (Signet Regency Romance) on + 3389 more book reviews
Of the four Amanda McCabe books I have read, this is easily the best. The first two books - A Scandal in Venice and The Spanish Bride - - had interesting premises but fizzled half way through. The third book - Lady Rogue - was simply awful (I picked it up mistaking it for the Errant Earl, her fourth work). I say that because there was a non-plot with absolutely no tension between the characters, and it made me hesitate before picking up this one.
But do try The Golden Feather, McCabe's fifth book. The heroine is a gaming house owner - a Mrs Archer. [Those who know a bit about the late Georgian era will have a good laugh here]. She meets, in unexpected circumstances, a man who she had seen only once before in her gaming house. Since "Mrs Archer" is trying to return to respectable life to give her young sister a chance at a good marriage eventually, she is naturally afraid that the man in question - Lord Lyndon - will find out her past and condemn both her and her sister for it.

This was a delightful character-driven book with an unusual heroine (a widow, who turns gaming house owner, turns respectable widow) and an almost equally unusual hero (a Black Sheep sent off to India by an irate father, who learns sobriety and maturity out there). Add in a dissolute younger brother of the hero and a matchmaking and somewhat reckless younger sister - both lacking in fashion sense, or possessed of an unique fashion sense. If Ms. McCabe can write like this in the future, I will definitely be writing more positive reviews


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