




I won’t remember this book or recommend it. There’s horse talk, and food talk, and a moustache twirling villain. There are changes in plots and the motivations of characters, but, by and large, the men are always cinnamon roll decent and the woman are reserved and self-possessed and harbouring some secret. I mean, I haven’t, but I’ve read Daniel's True Desire and A Rogue of Her Own and Nicholas: Lord of Secrets and they’re all pretty damn similar. And there is no one else in the romance industry writing like Grace Burrowes: she is a complete and true original.Įxcept, of course, for all the other books she’d written. There are always moments of joy in her writing: some cute conversation, funny observation or beautiful description. They are comforting and familiar like an old cashmere cardigan at the end of a long day. The best because Burrowes is wildly consistent at writing books I want to read. To contact Grace, email her at was a pretty classic Grace Burrowes, which is kind of the best thing I can say about it and the worst. The query letter that resulted in "the call" started out: "I am the buffoon in the bar at the RWA retreat who could not keep her heroines straight, could not look you in the eye, and could not stop blushing-and if that doesn't narrow down the possibilities, your job is even harder than I thought." (The dear lady bought the book anyway.) Grace eventually got up the courage to start pitching her manuscripts to agents and editors. ("Mom, why doesn't anybody tell you being a grown-up is hard?") This aim was realized when Beloved Offspring struck out into the Big World a few years ago. While reading yet still more romance novels, Grace opened her own law practice, acquired a master's degree in Conflict Transformation (she had a teenage daughter by then) and started thinking about writing. It also left enough time to grab a law degree through an evening program, produce Beloved Offspring (only one, but she is a lion), and eventually move to the lovely Maryland countryside. Her first career was as a technical writer and editor in the Washington, DC, area, a busy job that nonetheless left enough time to read a lot of romance novels. Early in life she spent a lot of time reading romance novels and practicing the piano. She is the sixth out of seven children, raised in the rural surrounds of central Pennsylvania. Grace Burrowes started writing as an antidote to empty nest and soon found it an antidote to life in general.
