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Bringing Down the Duke
by Evie Dunmore
368 Pages · 2019 · 3 MB · 78 Downloads · New!
“Bringing Down the Duke (A League of Extraordinary Women)” is a great romance book and the First book in A League of Extraordinary Women Series. Evie Dunmore is the lady behind this awesome novel. Evie is a consultant with a M.Sc. in Diplomacy from Oxford. She is also a member of the British Romantic Novelists’ Association. The novel “Bringing Down the Duke” is the story of Annabelle Archer and Sebastian Devereux. Annabelle is the daughter of a country vicar who doesn’t have many options as a woman but she does end up being one of the choose few women to get a place as a student at the University of Oxford. Annabelle does have to support the women’s suffrage movement in exchange for such an honoured seat. Annabelle has a task to complete for the cause and she has set it on Sebastian Devereux the Duke of Montgomery. If she can get him to support the Married Women’s Property Act of 1870 will help her cause. Sebastian, of course, doesn’t support the causes that Annabelle does which leads to them butting heads. Sebastian thinks of an ideal that may fix his problem but what happens when that backfires and he learns he wants more from Annabelle. Enjoyed their story and hope to read more from this author.
A Rogue Of One s Own
by Evie Dunmore
444 Pages · 2015 · 1 MB · 38 Downloads · New!
“A Rogue Of One s Own” is a story of love, loss, heartbreak, and unbreakable bonds. This novel is written by Evie Dunmore.  This is a gorgeous story about how life doesn’t always work out the way we want it to, but if we’re willing, we can still make it a great life. It is a good compelling story, engaging, and easy to read. This is the perfect holiday novel, you can pick it up and get straight back into the story. The novel ” A Rogue Of One s Own” is an enjoyable story that moves along at a good pace. It is not too quickly, but at a pace that keeps the reader engaged waiting to discover the outcome. It has a satisfactory ending which is a little predictable but ties up all the loose ends. Some of the male characters are a little too good to be true but that doesn’t spoil any part of the story. The author switches between the two time periods effortlessly and easily which doesn’t always happen in these kinds of books. Each storyline had a richness that was only strengthened by the comparison and contrast to the other.

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