Ratings4
Average rating3.8
Those of you following me on Twitter might be surprised I finished this book. I'm certain my mother is, as she gave up on it. I had my misgivings because it felt as though the tension keeping Elijah and Jemma apart was, well, grasping at straws. It was far too obvious that they cared for one another, and the way Jemma in the early pages of the book seems to be manipulating anyone and everyone to begin the seduction for her estranged husband because he “needed some fun” really annoyed me.
It took me a while to realize why it annoyed me so; I'm like Elijah, I don't like to play games and flirt needlessly, so for Jemma to convince women to throw themselves at Elijah because he hadn't ever flirted made me think Jemma wasn't good enough for him because she didn't care to know him or what mattered/worked for him.
I'm glad I stuck with it, though, because by the end I felt I understood both characters better. They were flawed, which I liked. They compromised, which I liked. They had scenes which made me glad my family was off somewhere else because I would have been embarrassed to be reading them knowing my younger brothers could have peeked over my shoulder and seen an errant, highly suggestive word. I liked that too, heh.
So all in all, while it's not the best romance I've read, I was highly entertained, and fascinated by the fact that Ms James, through the power of her writing, convinced me to keep reading. However, I will say that if Jemma had said “Oh, Elijah,” one more time, I was going to jump into that book and drag Jemma by her hair out of the bed for a good scolding.
Sorry. Pet peeve. “Oh, Name-of-Hero-Who-Stirs-My-Loins,” just looks cheesy on the page.
Originally posted at http://worderella.com/2010/09/book-this-duchess-of-mine/