Otherwise Engaged
Constantly stifled by the rules of Society, spirited Rebecca Rowley enjoys finding ways to quietly—or not so quietly—rebel. But riding bareback and avoiding nosy neighbors are nothing compared to the thrilling secret she is keeping from her family.
When Rebecca’s quick thinking saves the life of a young girl, she unwittingly attracts the attention of the child’s dashing brother, Lieutenant Nicholas Avery. As that attention turns flirtatious, Rebecca is forced to tell him the truth: she is secretly engaged—to the one man her family would never approve of. Fortunately, Lieutenant Avery is a navy man with no wish to marry, or so they both assume as they enter into a friendship. Rebecca hopes to change her family’s mind about her betrothed, but the more she comes to know the handsome lieutenant, the more she wonders if she promised her hand too hastily.
After all her carefully laid plans are shattered during a family crisis, Rebecca must force her heart to decide. Should she stay true to the promise she made or fight for the future she’s only just begun to imagine?
My Review: 6.5 /10
I had very strong mixed feelings on this one. Beware SPOILERS.
I
loved the first 85% of this book. But then the two main characters
crossed some lines. I lost some respect for Nicholas in the process -
she had been straight with him from the beginning. Though I loved what
he said, he shouldn't have kissed her. Afterward, she needed to get her
head straight and decide what she wanted. And if she wanted to continue
to pursue Edward, then she needed to be honest with him about what
happened. The story was still redeemable to me at this point.
Then
she meets him at the meadow and loses her mind, and integrity,
completely. What happened there was 1000% not okay. And Nicholas tells
her it's okay because the vows haven't been said yet?! Um, I think your
fiance would disagree. So disappointing. I was pretty much done at this
point.
Then Rebecca did something unexpected. She admitted she
was wrong, declared she was committed and went home. She spent the night
sorting out her thoughts and examining her feelings and she discovered
that she was fickle, selfish, foolish and lacking in integrity. She said
she didn't deserve either one of them and should cut them both loose.
And I thought, " YES GIRL. Yes." It doesn't feel good to learn these
things about yourself, but it's only then that you can change them.
There is power and freedom and growth in that. I thought, "I never saw
that coming. She's going to break it off with them both and develop some
character in herself, spend her time rebuilding her relationships with
her family. She might even look after his sister for the next several
months that he is gone, growing a relationship with her and being a good
role model for a change. And maybe when he returns, she will be ready.
Wow. I am so impressed."
But then I turned the page. She breaks
things off with Edward, who laughs and says, hey it's fine, I fell in
love with someone else too! Don't beat yourself up over it. Um...? I
think he would have had some different words for her if he hadn't also
been unfaithful. And the fact that he was doesn't suddenly make her
virtuous. Yikes.
Then she leaves, confused, and her mother comes
over to drive the final nail in the coffin with some worldly wisdom:
real love is strong and conquers all, and that should be a) the sign and
b) enough. Ugh, . I was so disappointed. This book started so strong. I
LOVED Rebecca's flawed, relatable person. I loved her and Nicholas
together. And there were tons of laugh out loud moments. But that ending
left me feeling robbed. I will have to try another one by this author
ASAP because I had such high hopes. And this couldn't possibly happen
again, right?
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