![]() ![]() ![]() This book is a bit more than 350 pages and is divided into five parts. Those who want steamy romance novellas that are loosely connected together with a frame story will find what they are looking for, but these stories are certainly nowhere near as worthwhile as the age itself that the book is set in and not particularly true too because the authors approach their subject matter with modern attitudes. ![]() Indeed, at least a few of the examples and setups of these stories may be seen as being destructive of a view of loyalty to family and morality in general. This particular novel also gives the authors the chance to write about feminist themes with women who have ambitions for freedom as well as intellectual achievement, some of whom are “down on love” until various circumstances force them into the arms of suitable men. This book is, like many contemporary romances, an anthology that is written about several couples by several romance authors, each of whom has an interest in regency romance fiction but simultaneously is not quite as skilled at capturing the morality and mentality of the time as they are of viewing the period as a place for regency cosplay. Four Weddings And A Sixpence: An Anthology, by Julia Quinn, Elizabeth Boyle, Laura Lee Guhrke, and Stefanie Sloane ![]()
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