The Bride’s Baby
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Product Description
The wedding of the season! Events manager Sylvie Smith is organizing a glittering fund-raising event: a wedding show in a stately home. She has even been roped into pretending to be a bride… a bride who’s five months pregnant! The bride everyone is talking about! It should be every girl’s dream to design a wedding with no expense spared, but it’s not Sylvie’s. Longbourne Court was her ancestral home, and she’s just learned that the new owner is Tom McFarlane–her baby’s secret father. Now Tom’s standing in front of her, looking at her bump….
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I got this book for 2 reasons…1. it was free and 2. I thought it was going to be a light read. I learned my lesson. Just because it’s free doesn’t mean I should download it. Although the plot was a excellent and simple one, the leader has written a confusing and irritating book. I really stopped reading it 3/4 the way through because I could not stand it anymore.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
I am very glad I didn’t pay for this. Synario was too silly for words. Leader has a very nice writing style which is the only reason I stuck with it…but a name needs to help her with her plots.
Reader’s Rating: 2 / 5
predictable dull a tale that is repeated by additional new or insecure writers. no substance.
Reader’s Rating: 2 / 5
I’ll be the first to admit it–I’m not a romance reader. Why, then, The Bride’s Baby? Well, to be honest, it was a free download for my Kindle, Sunday afternoon was quick approaching, and I was looking for a quick read. From the first few pages, I knew this one would be hard to get through. It wasn’t so much the character development (Sylvie is likable, witty and just vulnerable enough to be appealing), nor was it the plot (the tension between Sylvie and Tom is perfectly related). What made this hard was, reasonably frankly, the language. I’ve never read any Liz Fielding, but it was obvious from page 1 that she’s writing from a UK perspective, and sorry to say that perspective never reasonably makes the transition to “global.” The vocabulary was, at times, puzzling; the phrasing was sometimes awkward and hard to comprehend on a first read; and the punctuation about drove me mad (the use of single quotes as a replacement for of quotation inscription). Add to that the completely predictable conclusion, the page filling paragraphs of characters waxing poetic about their inner-most thoughts (ad nauseum I might add), and the repetition of the failed wedding theme, and I’m worried Fielding falls fleeting of a “excellent read”. I am just glad it was free.
Reader’s Rating: 2 / 5
Very predictable tale, but what do you expect from a free read? Had some fun moments.
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5