Book Review: Diana Rowland’s Mark of the Demon
Using her skills to catch a serial killer, Detective Kara Gillian ends up summoning a demonic lord. He could be useful as the killer appears to be well versed in demonic lore.
Using her skills to catch a serial killer, Detective Kara Gillian ends up summoning a demonic lord. He could be useful as the killer appears to be well versed in demonic lore.
Mags has talents not commonly found in Herald trainees, and the King’s Own Herald decides to train Mags as a spy to uncover the secrets of a mysterious new enemy.
Isobel Lambert may be sleek, sophisticated, and the powerful head of The Committee, but the ghost of her past returns for revenge.
Ivan the Terrible had owned a library filled with rare tomes men would kill for. One Annja soon discovers she’s racing a ruthless KGB agent driven by sinister motive.
Running from the Powers that killed his foster parents and took his brother, young Aaron is drawn to Maine and forced to learn more about the battle to dominate humanity.
Dreams of battlefields and wings plague Aaron on the eve of his eighteenth birthday before he learns his true destiny as a savior of angels.
A quiet vacation in the Andes turns deadly when a Black Ops, Inc. operative rescues a stunning stranger from a train robbery and discovers she’s the target of a manhunt.
Maisie Dobbs must prove Sir Cedric’s aviator son, Ralph Lawton, died when shot down in 1917, and she reunites with Priscilla Evernden in the former battlefields of France, whose brother is somehow connected.
I received this book for free from in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.An Offer From a GentlemanIt is part of the Bridgertons #3 series and is a in Paperback edition on October 13, 2009 and has 358 pages.Explore it on Goodreads or Amazon Other books in this series include [books_series] Third in the Bridgerton Family historical romance series. The couple focus is on Benedict Bridgerton and Sophie Beckett. My Take It’s Cinderella in Regency England and continues Quinn’s format of the truly decent Bridgertons who care for people no matter their station in life. Although it certainly takes Benedict awhile, as intent as he is on making Sophie his mistress. Such hypocrisy, even if it was normal for that time period. I did like Sophie holding onto her values. It’s sweet how Violet and the girls take her in. Although I don’t know why Violet didn’t hire her as a companion or secretary. It’s Sophie’s joy in life and her ignorance of his identity that captures Benedict’s attention. She is so different from the typical young lady launched into Society… Somehow, Philippa Featherington, who supposedly […]
As illness and murder cast a cloud over Prior Byfield, fear and suspicion reign — and Frevisse’s keen deductions lead her closer to the disturbing truth.