The devil wears kilts / Suzanne Enoch.
Material type: TextSeries: Enoch, Suzanne. Scandalous Highlanders novel ; Publisher: New York : St. Martin's Press, 2013Edition: St. Martin's Paperbacks editionDescription: 331 pages ; 17 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 1250041600 (pbk.)
- 9781250041609 (pbk.)
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adult Book | Dr. James Carlson Library | Fiction | Enoch Suzanne | SH 1 | Available | 33111007723816 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
"It's time to fall in love with Suzanne Enoch." --Lisa Kleypas
The Price of Passion...
On a mission to rescue his runaway sister from the lure of flowery compliments and a useless lot of satin-clad scalawags disguised by their snooty titles, Ranulf MacLawry, Marquis of Glengask, has roared into British society like a storm across the Scottish Highlands. But he's about to find out that satin has its appeal, especially when it covers the curves of Miss Lady Charlotte Hanover--whose tongue is as sharp as her skin is soft...
...is Pure Pleasure
Lady Charlotte Hanover has had her fill of hot-headed men, having lost her fiancé in an utterly unnecessary duel. When did brawn ever triumph over brains? And yet there is something solid and appealing about the brash Highlander who's as dangerous in the ballroom as in battle. Sometimes bigger really is better... in The Devil Wears Kilts .
"Always an eagerly anticipated pleasure." --Christina Dodd
"St. Martin's Paperbacks historical romance."
"Ranulf MacLawry, Marquis of Glengask, travels to London to retrieve his sister, Rowena, who has fled from their Highland home to have a Season in London like a proper lady. Ranulf is unprepared for the admonitions of Rowena's friend Lady Charlotte Hanover, who scolds him for bullying his sister and convinces him to let Rowena stay for two weeks of the best London has to offer. Ranulf reluctantly begins to admire Charlotte's forthright behavior; 'the English kitten' is the only woman who has ever truly stood up to 'the great Scottish bear.' He's less willing to admit that using reason instead of violence might be of real value to him and his clan, as the very suggestion smacks of English foppery."--Publishers Weekly.
Scotsman Ranulf MacLawry descends on the ballrooms of London in order to rescue his sister from a society he holds in contempt, only to fall for sharp-tongued Lady Charlotte Hanover, who believes that she prefers docile men.