As a Duke's daughter, Eleanor is being forced to take her place in society and finally marry. She doesn't need a husband, what she needs is a plan, but when that plan involves the Ton's most dangerous Duke she best not get tangled in her own trap.
At his club, Simeon, Duke of Northford felt a cold shiver down his spine. His scowls and aloof manner kept people at bay, much to his liking. Except for one green girl who always managed to get under his skin. He wondered what his old nemesis was doing these days since he hadn't seen her on the marriage mart.
Together they'll flout convention and set the Ton on fire. But not before each of them learns the lessons love has to teach them.
This steamy regency romantic comedy series will delight you if you are the type to laugh out loud at the antics of a "talking" dog, or cheer on difficult women overcoming obstacles, or scowl at men being nobcocks. This series is for the woman looking for laughs along with their steam, because is there any better place to laugh than in the arms of someone who loves you?
These girls are rebels who cross class lines like they skewer men's hearts. Oh but these men! It takes a strong man to love a difficult woman.
What others have to say about the book:
"Come join the fun, you will want to laugh through out the book."
Babs on Amazon
"Delightful regency style romp… and oh that dog of hers!! Be sure to listen out for the music to be made."
Redhvn on Amazon
"Oh laugh out loud funny, funny! Read the story. It's a real hoot from beginning to end!"
VJP on Amazon
Author Interview:
Why write Regency Romance if you aren't going to write it "correctly"?
Because as much as I love Regency tropes the actual language and social customs are torturous. Have you read dear Jane? I mean all credit to her, she invented the novel as we know it and I adore anything that puts Colin Firth in breeches but to sit down and read one of her stories now is onerous. We don't speak like that anymore and there are hours of nothing to do. I love Regency love stories for the tension that the social mores of that time yield. But I also love a good laugh. These books give me the tropes I love, laughter, and women I can see myself and my friends in. These are women you can imagine hatching plans with and enjoying a good laugh at how it all turned out afterwards.
If the women aren't related how are they the "Heiresses of Eris"?
One of the Regency tropes I love is the informal "club", usually men bound together over a common distrust of women or some such nonsense which in the end they all get over. Eris is the Greek goddess of chaos. She's the one who started the Trojan War by tossing an apple into a group of goddesses that said "to the fairest". These girls cause their own sort of mayhem. None of them were comfortable in the roles society assigned them. All of them decided to take matters into their own hands. That they all met was fate. When they did, they dubbed themselves the Heiresses of Eris. They knew what they were from the start.