MY SEASON OF SCANDAL

Slightly older than the average debutante, Catherine Keating is still a wide-eyed newcomer hoping to be dazzled by London’s beau monde. Lord Dominic Kirke, a Welshman by birth and a Whig Member of Parliament, finds high society boring, but he relishes crossing verbal swords with its powerful members on behalf of his poor constituents. When the two meet as new guests at the Grand Palace on the Thames boardinghouse, no one predicts that they will strike sparks off each other. Their initially unplanned meetings in the ballrooms for various gatherings turn into a secret friendship, which then hums with unspoken desire that neither can resist for long. But Dominic is a self-confessed rake who has no intention of ruining a country doctor’s daughter, while Catherine suspects that he’s feeling more for her than he admits. Their evenings at the cozy inn, with its kind and quirky inhabitants, wrap them tighter in warm intimacy, countering their attempts to keep a safe emotional and physical distance. London society has taken notice, though, and personal and political jealousy soon threatens Dominic’s closely held privacy and Catherine’s reputation. Long is masterful in building sensual suspense, and the story throbs with metaphors that conjure images of hearts and bodies under siege from sensations the protagonists battle. Though the third-act breakup is such a frequent feature in her books that it can feel forced, the potency of her style and her skill at building complex characters do much to compensate. The epilogue strikes a poignant note, extending beyond the main characters to promise many stories of others yet to be told.

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