by Anne Gracie (Author)
In this charming regency romance, a dog in need of rescue brings together a young debutante and a mysterious stranger--third in the Chance Sisters series.
After a childhood riddled with poverty and hardship, Jane Chance intends to enter high society and make a good, safe, sensible marriage during the London Season. All goes according to plan until a dark, dangerous vagabond helps her rescue a dog.
Zachary Black is all kinds of unsuitable--a former spy, now in disguise, he's wanted for murder. His instructions: to lie low until his name is cleared. But Zach has never followed the rules, and he wants Jane for his own, even if that means blazing his way into London society.
Jane knows she shouldn't fall in love with an unreliable, albeit devastatingly attractive, rogue. But Zach is determined--and he's a man accustomed to getting what he wants.
Format: Mass Market Paperback
Pages: 320
Publisher: Penguin USA
Published: 02 Jun 2015
ISBN 10: 0425259277
ISBN 13: 9780425259276
An enchanting spin on Regency tropes with the romance of pragmatic Jane Chance and dashing, disguised gentleman Zachary Black. --Publishers Weekly
Anne Gracie channels Jane Austen, Georgette Heyer, and fairy tales, most obviously Cinderella...and the result is an enchanting story in which the hero and heroine save one another...I ended the story with a lump in my throat, a smile on my face, and another Anne Gracie keeper in my hand. --Heroes and Heartbreakers
The main characters are vibrant and complex...the author's skill as a storyteller makes this well worth reading. --Kirkus Review
Praise for Anne Gracie
I never miss an Anne Gracie book. --Julia Quinn, New York Times bestselling author
For fabulous Regency flavor, witty and addictive, you can't go past Anne Gracie. --Stephanie Laurens, #1 New York Times bestselling author
With her signature superbly nuanced characters, subtle sense of wit and richly emotional writing, Gracie puts her distinctive stamp on a classic Regency plot. --Chicago Tribune
Anne Gracie's writing dances that thin line between always familiar and always fresh. --New York Journal of Books